THE PHYSICAL FITNESS DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN WITH FUNCTIONALLY SINGLE HEART VENTRICLE AS A BASIS OF THE PHYSICAL REHABILITATION TECHNOLOGY AFTER A HEMODYNAMIC CORRECTION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.53555/ephijer.v2i3.40Keywords:
Physical rehabilitation, congenital heart disease, functional single ventricleAbstract
The aim of the performed research was to determine the features of the physical development and its connection with the body of the children of school age who have a congenital heart disease with a functionally single heart’ ventricle for developing the physical rehabilitation technology. There were performed an examination of the 179 children with functionally single heart’ ventricle hospitalized for operative treatment in the State Center «Scientific and Practical Medical Center of the Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiosurgery of the Ministry of Health of Vietnam in the 2016 and 2017 years. The analysis of the physical development indicators of the children with functionally single heart’ ventricle allowed to establish a more pronounced lagging in the physical development by dividing the length and body mass index into the centile corridors and Roerre's index, comparing with children with other congenital heart disease, determining the need for development for patients with functionally single heart’ ventricle special physical rehabilitation technology. The physical rehabilitation technology of the children with functionally single heart’ ventricle after a hemodynamic correction should include the principles of physical rehabilitation, pedagogical principles, age characteristics of children, the indicators of physical development, the quantitative indicators of the biogeometrical posture profile, features of hemodynamics, functional condition of cardiovascular and respiratory systems.
References
. Chaykovska, G. S., Gnateyko, O. Z. (2012). Analysis of mortality and increased factors the risk of birth of children with congenital heart disease, Сhild's health, 4, pp. 67-70. Struchkova, A. (1975). Pediatric Thoracic Surgery, Medicine, p.560.
. Drozdova, I. V., Lyisunets, E. M., Moroz, S. M. (2010). Personal features of patients with operated congenital heart disease, International medical journal, 16 (4), pp. 8-10.
. Kul'chenko, I. A., Komisarenko, O. A. (2012). Features of rehabilitation of patients who underwent coronary shunting, Cardiosurgery and inertial cardiology, 1, рр. 50-52.
. Larsson, E. S., Eriksson, B. O., Sixt, R. (2003). Decreased lung function and exercise capacity in Fontan patients. A long-term follow-up, Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal, 37 (1), pp. 58–63.
. Lazareva, E., Vitomskiy, V. (2014). Means of physical rehabilitation at the inpatient stage of restoring the health of children operated on for congenital heart disease, The young scientific scholar of East-European National University named after L. Ukrainki. Series: physical education and sport, 13, pp. 37-42.
. Rhodes, J., Tikkanen, A. U., Jenkins, K. J. (2000). Exercise Testing and Training in Children With Congenital Heart Disease, Circulation, 122 (19), pp. 1957–1967.
. Swan, L., Hillis, W. S. (2000). Exercise prescription in adults with congenital heart disease: a long way to go, Heart, 83, pp. 685–687.
. Vitomskiy, V. (2015). Methodical bases for constructing a program for physical rehabilitation for school-age children with a functionally single ventricle of the heart, The young scientific scholar of East-European National University named after. L. Ukrainky. Series: physical education and sport, 18, pp. 111-116.
. Volodymyr Vitomskiy, Volodymyr Kormiltsev, Iryna Hruzevych, Svitlana Salnykova , Yurii Shevchuk, Yulia Yakusheva. (2018). Features of the physical development of children with functionally single heart ventricle as a basis of the physical rehabilitation technology after a hemodynamic correction. Journal of Physical Education and Sport, 18(1), pp. 421 – 424.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2021 EPH - International Journal of Educational Research (ISSN: 2208-2204)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.