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The Effects of Telerehabilitation and Exercise Training in Pediatric Arrhythmia Patients With Pacemakers

H

Hacettepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Congenital Heart Disease

Treatments

Other: Patient Education
Other: Exercise Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05454501
E-22481095-020-1222

Details and patient eligibility

About

There is no study evaluating online exercise training and results in children with pacemakers. This study investigates the effects of group exercise training performed via computer online videoconferencing in pediatric arrhythmia patients with pacemakers. Pediatric arrhythmia patients aged 6-18 years with a pacemaker, stable clinically, and living with at least one parent or caregiver who can support them at home will be included in the study. Eligible patients will be randomly divided into two groups. After the face-to-face evaluation session, those in the intervention group will receive real-time online exercise training for 30 minutes, three days a week, with a peer group of 5-6 people for eight weeks. Physical activity will be monitored for seven days before starting the exercise and seven days after the training is completed. After the first face-to-face evaluation session, patients in the control group and their families will receive a 1-hour disease- and exercise-specific patient education program. Information brochures containing physical activity and exercise recommendations will be given. They will be followed up with weekly phone calls throughout the study period.

Full description

It is known that physical activity and exercise have long-term beneficial effects on preventing atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases, dyslipidemia, obesity, hypertension, osteoporosis, and type 2 diabetes, frequently seen in sedentary individuals. Various exercise training programs are safe and feasible and improve functional outcome measures in this patient population. Walking distance, peak oxygen consumption, and increased physical activity were observed in these patients with exercise training. Increasing physical activity in children is also associated with gross motor performance development and positive emotional, social, and intellectual development. The probability of being a sedentary adult was very low in congenital heart patients who do sports from an early age. Universal reports drew attention to the importance of exercise and physical activities in children with heart disease and stated that they should be encouraged. Paradoxically, only a minority of children with heart disease receive physical activity counseling. Children with pacemakers have similar potential to improve their physical fitness through physical activity as their healthy peers. However, children often experience an uncertainty about what physical activities should be recommended and how the intensity of exercise should be, and they are brought up with overprotective attitudes. This encourages children to inactivity and causes them to feel inadequacy and fear. In addition, patient and family concerns about the particular vulnerability of children with pacemakers; may exacerbate social isolation and physical inactivity more than the general population. .

Exercise training may be the most crucial strategy to improve functional capacity, increase physical activity and reduce the risk of future cardiovascular events. Although consensus reports indicated that exercise should be encouraged and performed regularly in these patients, it is not a common practice. Among the possible reasons; are logistical problems, costs, and parental concern about adverse events. There is a need to evaluate the effects of rehabilitation programs that can connect safely and inexpensively with these patients, including those living geographically far from rehabilitation centers. Home-based exercise approaches can be preferred as a safe, feasible, and beneficial alternative to supervised cardiac rehabilitation for all age groups with congenital hearth disease. The effectiveness of online exercise programs provided or supported through the Internet and related technologies is safe for children to participate in and improve compliance.

The potential of online exercise programs in children with congenital hearth disease remains largely unexplored. Although no study evaluates exercise training and results in pediatric arrhythmia patients with pacemakers, the subject is open to research.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • stable clinical condition (having a medical examination in the last three months, including an ECG and an echocardiogram),
  • living with at least one parent or caregiver who can support them at home

Exclusion criteria

  • To have any neurological, advanced orthopedic problems, any other systemic disease or acute infection,
  • To use anticoagulant drugs,
  • To have Down syndrome,
  • Cannot cooperate with the video conference system and measurements

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

36 participants in 2 patient groups

Exercise Training
Active Comparator group
Description:
8-week real-time online exercise training will be provided. The content of the training will be aerobic based exercises, strength and flexibility exercises with warm up and cool down phases.
Treatment:
Other: Exercise Training
Patient Education
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will be given face-to-face education about their disease, the importance of physical activity and how to do it safely. They will be followed up with information leaflets and weekly phone calls.
Treatment:
Other: Patient Education

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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