Hulsegge Gerben, Henschke Nicholas, McKay Damien, Chaitow Jeffrey, West Kerry, Broderick Carolyn, Singh-Grewal Davinder
Musculoskeletal Division, George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Centre for Nutrition, Prevention and Health Services, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
J Paediatr Child Health. 2015 Apr;51(4):425-32. doi: 10.1111/jpc.12733. Epub 2014 Sep 1.
To describe fundamental movement skills (FMS), physical fitness and level of physical activity among Australian children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and compare this with healthy peers.
Children aged 6-16 years with JIA were recruited from hospital rheumatology clinics and private rheumatology rooms in Sydney, Australia. All children attended an assessment day, where FMS were assessed by a senior paediatric physiotherapist, physical fitness was assessed using the multistage 20-metre shuttle run test, and physical activity and physical and psychosocial well-being were assessed with questionnaires. These results were compared with age- and gender-matched peers from the NSW Schools Physical Activity and Nutrition Survey and the Health of Young Victorians Study using logistic regression analysis.
Twenty-eight children with JIA participated in this study. There were no differences in the proportion of children who had mastered FMS between children with JIA and their healthy peers (P > 0.05). However, there was a trend for children with JIA to have poorer physical fitness and be less physically active than healthy peers. Parents of children with JIA indicated more physical and psychosocial impairments among their children and themselves compared with parents of healthy children (P < 0.05).
This is the first study in Australia to compare FMS, physical activity and fitness in children with JIA and their peers. While older children with JIA appear to have poorer physical fitness and physical activity levels than their peers, there is no difference in FMS.
描述澳大利亚青少年特发性关节炎(JIA)患儿的基本运动技能(FMS)、身体素质和身体活动水平,并与健康同龄人进行比较。
从澳大利亚悉尼的医院风湿病诊所和私立风湿病诊室招募6至16岁的JIA患儿。所有儿童参加一个评估日,由资深儿科物理治疗师评估FMS,使用20米多级往返跑测试评估身体素质,并用问卷评估身体活动以及身体和心理社会幸福感。使用逻辑回归分析将这些结果与新南威尔士州学校身体活动与营养调查以及维多利亚州青少年健康研究中年龄和性别匹配的同龄人进行比较。
28名JIA患儿参与了本研究。JIA患儿与其健康同龄人中掌握FMS的儿童比例没有差异(P>0.05)。然而,JIA患儿的身体素质有比健康同龄人差且身体活动较少的趋势。与健康儿童的父母相比,JIA患儿的父母表示其子女及自身存在更多身体和心理社会方面的损伤(P<0.05)。
这是澳大利亚第一项比较JIA患儿及其同龄人FMS、身体活动和身体素质的研究。虽然年龄较大的JIA患儿的身体素质和身体活动水平似乎比同龄人差,但FMS没有差异。