Beyond the acute phase: understanding relationships among cardio-respiratory response to exercises, physical activity levels, and quality of life in children after burn injuries.

2021 
The long-term cardiorespiratory function in burn-injured children can be jeopardized due to complications brought on by the injury. This study sought to assess the cardio-respiratory responses to maximal exercise in children who sustained a burn injury and explore the relationships among cardio-respiratory response, physical activity levels (PALs), and health-related quality of life (HRQL). Forty-five burn-injured children (age:13.89±2.43 years; duration since burn-injury: 3.13±0.93 years) and 52 age- and gender-matched healthy children (14.15±2.27 years) participated in this study. Both cohorts were evaluated for the maximal exercise capacity [defined by peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak), maximum heart rate (HRmax), minute ventilation (VE), ventilatory equivalent (VEq), respiratory rate (RR), and respiratory exchange ratio (RER)], PALs, and HRQL. The burn-injured children had significantly lower VO2peak (P=.0001) and VE (P=.003) and higher VEq (P<.0001) and RR (P=.007) than their healthy controls, indicating less efficient cardio-respiratory capacity. However, the HRmax (P=.092) and RER (P=.251) were similar. The burn-injured children reported significantly lower PALs (P=.014) and HRQL (P<.0001). The PALs [r (95%CI) = 0.411 (0.132 to 0.624); P = .005] and HRQL [r (95%CI) = 0.536 (0.284 to 0.712); P = .0001] were significantly correlated with the cardio-respiratory capacity represented by VO2peak in burn-injured group. The variations in VO2peak explained ⁓ 17% and 28.7% of the variations in PALs and HRQL, respectively. In conclusion, the cardio-respiratory efficiency of the burn-injured children may remain limited, even up to a few years following the injury. The limited cardio-respiratory capacity account in part for the reduced PALs and HRQL.
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