Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease

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Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease. / Freilinger, Sebastian; Andric, Dario; Andonian, Caroline; Beckmann, Jürgen; Bongarth, Christa; Einwang, Hans Peter; Ewert, Peter; Hofbeck, Michael; Kaemmerer, Ann-Sophie; Nagdyman, Nicole; Oberhoffer, Renate; von Kodolitsch, Yskert; Kaemmerer, Harald; Neidenbach, Rhoia.

In: CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE, Vol. 11, No. 6, 12.2021, p. 1416-1431.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Freilinger, S, Andric, D, Andonian, C, Beckmann, J, Bongarth, C, Einwang, HP, Ewert, P, Hofbeck, M, Kaemmerer, A-S, Nagdyman, N, Oberhoffer, R, von Kodolitsch, Y, Kaemmerer, H & Neidenbach, R 2021, 'Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease', CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE, vol. 11, no. 6, pp. 1416-1431. https://doi.org/10.21037/cdt-20-727

APA

Freilinger, S., Andric, D., Andonian, C., Beckmann, J., Bongarth, C., Einwang, H. P., Ewert, P., Hofbeck, M., Kaemmerer, A-S., Nagdyman, N., Oberhoffer, R., von Kodolitsch, Y., Kaemmerer, H., & Neidenbach, R. (2021). Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease. CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE, 11(6), 1416-1431. https://doi.org/10.21037/cdt-20-727

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{66f1ed9c24d241069ab4874addc20ac2,
title = "Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease",
abstract = "Background: The number of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) is steadily increasing. Over their life-time, many of the affected patients require medical rehabilitation after interventional or surgical treatment of residua, sequels or complications of their congenital heart defect (CHD). However, up to now only scarce data exist about indication, performance and outcomes of cardiac rehabilitation in ACHD.Methods: The course and outcome of rehabilitation after previous interventional or surgical treatment in ACHD was analyzed in a retrospective cohort study.Results: Two hundred and five ACHD {54% female; mean age 34±12 [16-68] years} with mild (23.9%), moderate (35.1%) or severe CHD (41.0%), of whom 32% had complex CHD, 21% right-ventricular outflow tract obstructions, 20% pre-tricuspid shunts, 18% left heart or aortic anomalies, 9% post-tricuspid shunts and 2% other congenital cardiac anomalies were included into analysis. The main indications for rehabilitation were a preceding surgical (92%) or interventional (3%) treatment of the underlying CHD immediately before rehabilitation. During rehabilitation, no severe complications occurred. The number of patients in function class I/II increased from 189 to 200 and decreased in class III/IV from 16 to 5. Cardiac medication could be reduced or stopped after rehabilitation in 194 patients, with the exception of ACE-inhibitors. There was an improvement in cardiovascular risk factors. While before medical treatment 77% (n=157) patients were capable of working, the number increased to 82% [168] at the end of rehabilitation. Throughout a follow-up 9.3% (n=19) of patients needed further cardiac interventions.Conclusions: The current study provided for the first time comprehensive data on the course of rehabilitation in a large cohort of ACHD after surgical or interventional treatment. The overall outcome of ACHD after rehabilitation was uneventful and favorable. Further research is required to assess the clinical long-term outcome, the impact of rehabilitation on the quality of life, disease coping and employment. The results of this study can serve as a benchmark for the development of specific rehabilitation programs in ACHD.",
author = "Sebastian Freilinger and Dario Andric and Caroline Andonian and J{\"u}rgen Beckmann and Christa Bongarth and Einwang, {Hans Peter} and Peter Ewert and Michael Hofbeck and Ann-Sophie Kaemmerer and Nicole Nagdyman and Renate Oberhoffer and {von Kodolitsch}, Yskert and Harald Kaemmerer and Rhoia Neidenbach",
note = "2021 Cardiovascular Diagnosis and Therapy. All rights reserved.",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
doi = "10.21037/cdt-20-727",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "1416--1431",
journal = "CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE",
issn = "2223-3652",
publisher = "AME Publishing Company",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lessons from the short- and mid-term outcome of medical rehabilitation in adults with congenital heart disease

AU - Freilinger, Sebastian

AU - Andric, Dario

AU - Andonian, Caroline

AU - Beckmann, Jürgen

AU - Bongarth, Christa

AU - Einwang, Hans Peter

AU - Ewert, Peter

AU - Hofbeck, Michael

AU - Kaemmerer, Ann-Sophie

AU - Nagdyman, Nicole

AU - Oberhoffer, Renate

AU - von Kodolitsch, Yskert

AU - Kaemmerer, Harald

AU - Neidenbach, Rhoia

N1 - 2021 Cardiovascular Diagnosis and Therapy. All rights reserved.

PY - 2021/12

Y1 - 2021/12

N2 - Background: The number of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) is steadily increasing. Over their life-time, many of the affected patients require medical rehabilitation after interventional or surgical treatment of residua, sequels or complications of their congenital heart defect (CHD). However, up to now only scarce data exist about indication, performance and outcomes of cardiac rehabilitation in ACHD.Methods: The course and outcome of rehabilitation after previous interventional or surgical treatment in ACHD was analyzed in a retrospective cohort study.Results: Two hundred and five ACHD {54% female; mean age 34±12 [16-68] years} with mild (23.9%), moderate (35.1%) or severe CHD (41.0%), of whom 32% had complex CHD, 21% right-ventricular outflow tract obstructions, 20% pre-tricuspid shunts, 18% left heart or aortic anomalies, 9% post-tricuspid shunts and 2% other congenital cardiac anomalies were included into analysis. The main indications for rehabilitation were a preceding surgical (92%) or interventional (3%) treatment of the underlying CHD immediately before rehabilitation. During rehabilitation, no severe complications occurred. The number of patients in function class I/II increased from 189 to 200 and decreased in class III/IV from 16 to 5. Cardiac medication could be reduced or stopped after rehabilitation in 194 patients, with the exception of ACE-inhibitors. There was an improvement in cardiovascular risk factors. While before medical treatment 77% (n=157) patients were capable of working, the number increased to 82% [168] at the end of rehabilitation. Throughout a follow-up 9.3% (n=19) of patients needed further cardiac interventions.Conclusions: The current study provided for the first time comprehensive data on the course of rehabilitation in a large cohort of ACHD after surgical or interventional treatment. The overall outcome of ACHD after rehabilitation was uneventful and favorable. Further research is required to assess the clinical long-term outcome, the impact of rehabilitation on the quality of life, disease coping and employment. The results of this study can serve as a benchmark for the development of specific rehabilitation programs in ACHD.

AB - Background: The number of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) is steadily increasing. Over their life-time, many of the affected patients require medical rehabilitation after interventional or surgical treatment of residua, sequels or complications of their congenital heart defect (CHD). However, up to now only scarce data exist about indication, performance and outcomes of cardiac rehabilitation in ACHD.Methods: The course and outcome of rehabilitation after previous interventional or surgical treatment in ACHD was analyzed in a retrospective cohort study.Results: Two hundred and five ACHD {54% female; mean age 34±12 [16-68] years} with mild (23.9%), moderate (35.1%) or severe CHD (41.0%), of whom 32% had complex CHD, 21% right-ventricular outflow tract obstructions, 20% pre-tricuspid shunts, 18% left heart or aortic anomalies, 9% post-tricuspid shunts and 2% other congenital cardiac anomalies were included into analysis. The main indications for rehabilitation were a preceding surgical (92%) or interventional (3%) treatment of the underlying CHD immediately before rehabilitation. During rehabilitation, no severe complications occurred. The number of patients in function class I/II increased from 189 to 200 and decreased in class III/IV from 16 to 5. Cardiac medication could be reduced or stopped after rehabilitation in 194 patients, with the exception of ACE-inhibitors. There was an improvement in cardiovascular risk factors. While before medical treatment 77% (n=157) patients were capable of working, the number increased to 82% [168] at the end of rehabilitation. Throughout a follow-up 9.3% (n=19) of patients needed further cardiac interventions.Conclusions: The current study provided for the first time comprehensive data on the course of rehabilitation in a large cohort of ACHD after surgical or interventional treatment. The overall outcome of ACHD after rehabilitation was uneventful and favorable. Further research is required to assess the clinical long-term outcome, the impact of rehabilitation on the quality of life, disease coping and employment. The results of this study can serve as a benchmark for the development of specific rehabilitation programs in ACHD.

U2 - 10.21037/cdt-20-727

DO - 10.21037/cdt-20-727

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 35070810

VL - 11

SP - 1416

EP - 1431

JO - CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE

JF - CARDIOVASC DIAGN THE

SN - 2223-3652

IS - 6

ER -