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Physical training and healthy diet improved bowel symptoms, quality of life and fatigue in children with inflammatory bowel disease

Authors :
Scheffers, L E
Vos, I K
Utens, E M W J
Dieleman, G C
Walet, S
Escher, J C
van den Berg, L E
Pediatrics
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology
Internal Medicine
Cardiology
Source :
Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Physical activity programs have been suggested as adjunctive therapy in adult IBD patients. We assessed the effects of a 12-week lifestyle intervention in children with IBD. METHODS: This study was a randomized semi-crossover controlled trial, investigating a 12-week lifestyle program (3 physical training sessions per week plus personalized healthy dietary advice) in children with IBD. Endpoints were physical fitness (maximal and submaximal exercise capacity, strength, and core stability), patient-reported outcomes (quality of life, fatigue, and fears for exercise), clinical disease activity (fecal calprotectin and disease activity scores), and nutritional status (energy balance and body composition). Change in maximal exercise capacity (peakVO2) was the primary endpoint, all others were secondary endpoints. RESULTS: Fifteen patients (median age 15 [IQR:12-16]) completed the program. At baseline, peak VO2 was reduced (median 73.3% [58.8-100.9] of predicted). After the 12-week program compared to the control period, peakVO2 did not change significantly, exercise capacity measured by 6-minute walking test and core-stability did. While medical treatment remained unchanged, PUCAI disease activity scores decreased significantly versus the control period (15 [3-25] vs 2.5 [0-5], p=0.012), and fecal calprotectin also decreased significantly but not versus the control period. Quality of life (IMPACT-III) improved on 4 out of 6 domains and total score (+13 points) versus the control period. Parents-reported quality of life on the Child health questionnaire and total fatigue score (PedsQol MFS) also improved significantly versus the control period. CONCLUSIONS: A 12-week lifestyle intervention improved bowel symptoms, quality of life, and fatigue in Pediatric IBD patients.Trial registration number: www.trialregister.nl as Trial NL8181.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02772116
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Accession number :
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