Abstract

ObjectiveExercise capacity is impaired in Fontan palliated patients. The change in daily activity behaviour with an increase in sedentary lifestyle results in low physical activity levels. This might have a greater impact on patients with chronic heart disease in contrast to healthy controls. For a better understanding, we compared data from cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) with heart rates and physical activity in daily life.Methods21 Fontan patients and 20 age, sex and BMI matched controls underwent CPET and 5 days of daily life activity tracking with a triaxial accelerometer (wGT3x-BT, Actigraph) including heart rate monitoring with an optical heart rate sensor.Results27% of our Fontan teenagers and 71% of the Fontan adults reached the specific WHO recommendations for moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during everyday life (EDL), without differences to controls. There was a strong correlation between MVPA and for all Fontan patients (p = 0.0035, Pearson r = 0.788). Daily MVPA correlated to peak oxygen uptake and lactate production. Up to workloads of 2 W/kg and in daily life heart rates in Fontan patients were similar to controls.ConclusionsDaily MVPA is alarmingly low without any differences between Fontan patients and controls. Heart rate behaviour was similar and does not seem to be a limiting factor for physical activity in daily life. Higher intensity activities should be implemented regularly in EDL for Fontan patients. Proof is needed as to whether sports in moderate or possibly even in vigorous activity (e.g. high-intensity interval training) improve exercise capacity the most.

Highlights

  • In Germany, 200 children are born annually with a complex heart defect leading to a univentricular circulation [1]

  • moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) is alarmingly low without any differences between Fontan patients and controls

  • This is problematic, since an inactive, sedentary lifestyle is becoming more common in childhood and can lead to further restrictions in cardiac function and physical capacity especially in Fontan patients, since this patient group is assumed to have a disproportionately loss of cardiopulmonary capacity at younger age [9]

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Summary

Objective

Exercise capacity is impaired in Fontan palliated patients. The change in daily activity behaviour with an increase in sedentary lifestyle results in low physical activity levels. This might have a greater impact on patients with chronic heart disease in contrast to healthy controls. We compared data from cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) with heart rates and physical activity in daily life

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