Publication | Open Access
Cystic fibrosis: physical exercise versus chest physiotherapy.
96
Citations
7
References
1982
Year
Physical ActivityPediatric Lung DiseaseExercise RehabilitationTwelve ChildrenKinesiologyExercisePhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologyClinical ExercisePediatric Physical TherapyHealth SciencesPhysical MedicineClinical Exercise PhysiologyRehabilitationPaediatric Rehabilitation HospitalPhysical TherapyExercise ScienceExercise PhysiologyPediatricsPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsAthletic TrainingMedicine
Twelve children with cystic fibrosis were admitted to a paediatric rehabilitation hospital for 17 days to take part in a training programme of vigorous physical exercise and sport. The daily inhalation-physiotherapy routine was stopped. Ventilatory status was assessed by spirometry and measurement of lung volumes one day before admission, one day after the end of the hospital stay, and 8 weeks later. Flow measurements of forced expiration had improved appreciably by the end of the course, but most of them returned to pretraining levels 8 weeks later. Lung volumes did not change significantly. Daily recordings of peak flow indicated improvement of airways function plus some ventilatory muscle training. Regular physical exercise could replace the inhalation-physiotherapy routine in some children with cystic fibrosis.
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