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Dive into the research topics where Nienke Duppen is active.

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Featured researches published by Nienke Duppen.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Systematic review of the effects of physical exercise training programmes in children and young adults with congenital heart disease

Nienke Duppen; Tim Takken; Maria T. E. Hopman; A.D.J. ten Harkel; Karolijn Dulfer; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens; Wim A. Helbing

BACKGROUND Most patients with congenital heart disease (ConHD) do not perform regular physical exercise. Consensus reports have stated that exercise should be encouraged and regularly performed in these patients, but this is not common practise. We reviewed the literature on actual evidence for either negative or positive effects of physical exercise training programmes in children and young adults with ConHD. METHODS Using the Medline database, we systematically searched for articles on physical exercise training programmes in ConHD. RESULTS A total of 31 articles met all inclusion criteria; in total, 621 subjects (age range 4 to 45 years) were included. Most studies used training programmes with a duration of 12 weeks. On average, the number of training sessions was 3 times per week. In 12 studies, training intensity was set at a percentage of peak heart rate. Outcome measures reported were PeakVO2, activity levels and muscle strength. Twenty-three studies (72%) found a significant positive change in the main outcome measure after the physical exercise training period. None of the studies reported negative findings related to physical exercise training in ConHD. Cardiac effects have hardly been studied. CONCLUSION In most studies, participation in a physical exercise training programme was safe and improved fitness in children and young adults with ConHD. We recommend that patients with ConHD participate in physical exercise training. Cardiac effects need to be studied more extensively.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2014

Aerobic Exercise Influences Quality of Life of Children and Youngsters With Congenital Heart Disease: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Karolijn Dulfer; Nienke Duppen; Irene M. Kuipers; Michiel Schokking; Ron T. van Domburg; Frank C. Verhulst; Willem A. Helbing; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens

PURPOSE To evaluate effects of an exercise program on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children and adolescents with tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) or a Fontan circulation. METHODS Stratified, randomized, controlled intervention study conducted in five participating centers of pediatric cardiology in The Netherlands. In total, 93 patients, aged 10-25 years, with surgical repair for tetralogy of Fallot or with a Fontan circulation for single-ventricle physiology were included. They were randomly allocated with a ratio of 2:1 to: (1) a 12-week period with an exercise program for 3 times per week or (2) to a control group. Randomization was stratified by age, gender, and cardiac diagnosis. At baseline and follow-up after 12 weeks, all participants completed Web-based age-appropriate HRQoL questionnaires. Primary analyses involved change in HRQoL during follow-up. Secondary analyses concerned influence of cardiac diagnosis and comparison with normative data. RESULTS Forty-eight (86%) and 32 (86%) patients in the exercise-group and control-group respectively completed all questionnaires at baseline and follow-up. Compared with the control-group, children, aged 10-15 years, in the exercise-group improved significantly on self-reported cognitive functioning, p < .05, r = .30, and parent-reported social functioning, p < .05, r = .30. Youngsters aged 16-25 years did not change their HRQoL. Cardiac diagnosis had no influence on pre/post changes. Children and youngsters in this study reported comparable or better HRQoL than norm groups. CONCLUSIONS Participation in an exercise program improved HRQoL of children with ToF or a Fontan circulation, especially in those with low baseline QoL.


European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2014

Associations between exercise capacity, physical activity, and psychosocial functioning in children with congenital heart disease: a systematic review:

Karolijn Dulfer; Willem A. Helbing; Nienke Duppen; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens

Background Children and adolescents operated upon for congenital heart disease (ConHD) may show reduced exercise capacity and physical activity, possibly associated with lowered self-esteem and quality of life (QoL). The studies into associations between these parameters have not been reviewed before. Objective Review of studies into associations between exercise capacity, physical activity, respectively exercise training, and psychosocial functioning of ConHD youngsters. Data sources PubMed, Embase and reference lists of related articles. Study selection Articles published between January 2000 and December 2012 into exercise capacity and/or physical activity, and a measure of psychosocial functioning in children with ConHD. Data extraction Two investigators independently reviewed the identified articles for eligibility, and one author extracted the data. Results Although exercise capacity was strongly related to physical domains of parent-reported and self-reported QoL, it was almost never associated with psychosocial domains of QoL. Physical activity was rarely associated with physical or psychosocial domains of QoL. Remarkably, self-reported depressive symptoms were associated with both physical and psychosocial QoL. The few studies into exercise-training programmes showed promising results in QoL and emotional and behavioral problems, but they contained methodological flaws. Conclusions No clear relationships were found between exercise capacity, physical activity, and QoL in children and adolescents with ConHD. Therefore we recommend assessing QoL separately, preferably both self-reported and parent-reported. Since depressive symptoms were associated with reduced physical and psychosocial QoL, screening on these symptoms is also recommended.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2015

The effect of exercise training on cardiac remodelling in children and young adults with corrected tetralogy of Fallot or Fontan circulation: A randomized controlled trial

Nienke Duppen; L. Kapusta; Y.B. de Rijke; M. Snoeren; Irene M. Kuipers; L.P. Koopman; A.C. Blank; Nico A. Blom; Karolijn Dulfer; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens; Maria T. E. Hopman; Wim A. Helbing

BACKGROUND Exercise can improve physical fitness in children and adults with congenital heart disease. We hypothesized that exercise training would not lead to adverse cardiac remodelling in this population. METHODS AND RESULTS This multi-centre randomized controlled trial included children and young adults (10 to 25 years) with either corrected tetralogy of Fallot or Fontan circulation. The exercise-group was enrolled in a 12 week standardized aerobic dynamic exercise training program. The control-group continued their life-style and received care as usual. Both groups underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), echocardiography and neurohormonal assessment, within 2 weeks before and 2 weeks after the intervention period. Fifty-six patients were randomized to the exercise-group and 37 to the control-group. We assessed changes between the pre- and the post-intervention period for the exercise group compared to the changes in the control-group. Peak load increased significantly in the exercise-group compared to the control-group (exercise-group 6.9 ± 11.8 W; control-group 0.8 ± 13.9 W; p=0.047). There were no adverse events linked to the study. Ventricular systolic parameters, cardiac dimensions and neurohormonal markers during follow-up did not change in patients allocated to the exercise-group and control-group. Although there were some isolated minor changes in inflow parameters, there was no consistent pattern of changes, indicating a lack of true change in the diastolic function. CONCLUSION We demonstrated that no clinically relevant adverse cardiac remodelling occurred after 12 weeks of exercise training in patients with either corrected tetralogy of Fallot or Fontan circulation. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION www.trialregister.nl, identification NTR2731.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2014

Exercise capacity in children after total cavopulmonary connection: Lateral tunnel versus extracardiac conduit technique

Sjoerd S.M. Bossers; Willem A. Helbing; Nienke Duppen; Irene M. Kuipers; Michiel Schokking; Mark G. Hazekamp; Ad J.J.C. Bogers; Arend D.J. ten Harkel; Tim Takken

OBJECTIVES In patients with univentricular heart disease, the total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC) is the preferred treatment. TCPC can be performed using the intra-atrial lateral tunnel (ILT) or extracardiac conduit (ECC) technique. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate exercise capacity in contemporary TCPC patients and compare the results between the 2 techniques. METHODS A total of 101 TCPC patients (ILT, n=42; ECC, n=59; age, 12.2±2.6 years; age at TCPC completion, 3.2±1.1 years) underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing. The patients were recruited prospectively from 5 tertiary referral centers. RESULTS For the entire group, the mean peak oxygen uptake was 74%±14%, peak heart rate was 90%±8%, peak workload was 62%±13%, and slope of ventilation versus carbon dioxide elimination (VE/VCO2 slope) was 127%±30% of the predicted value. For the ILT and ECC groups, patient age, age at TCPC completion, body surface area, peak workload, and peak heart rate were comparable. The percentage of predicted peak oxygen uptake was lower in the ILT group (70%±12% vs 77%±15%; P=.040), and the percentage of predicted VE/VCO2 slope was greater in the ILT group (123%±36% vs 108%±14%; P=.015). In a subgroup analysis that excluded ILT patients with baffle leak, these differences were not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS Common exercise parameters were impaired in contemporary Fontan patients. Chronotropic incompetence was uncommon. The peak oxygen uptake and VE/VCO2 slope were less favorable in ILT patients, likely related to baffle leaks in some ILT patients. These results have shown that a reduced exercise capacity in Fontan patients remains an important issue in contemporary cohorts. The ECC had a more favorable exercise outcome at medium-term follow-up.


Pediatric Cardiology | 2015

Parental Mental Health Moderates the Efficacy of Exercise Training on Health-Related Quality of Life in Adolescents with Congenital Heart Disease

Karolijn Dulfer; Nienke Duppen; Arie P.J. van Dijk; Irene M. Kuipers; Ron T. van Domburg; Frank C. Verhulst; Jan van der Ende; Willem A. Helbing; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens

Abstract To evaluate the moderating influence of parental variables on changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescents with Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) or a Fontan circulation after participation in standardized exercise training. A multicenter randomized controlled trail in which 56 patients, aged 10–15, were randomly allocated (stratified by age, gender, and congenital heart disease) to a 12-week period with either: (a) 3 times per week standardized exercise training or (b) care-as-usual (randomization ratio 2:1). Adolescents and their parents filled in online questionnaires at baseline and at 12-week follow-up. In this randomized controlled trail, primary analyses involved influence of parental mental health and parental social support for exercise on changes in the TNO/AZL Child Quality of Life Questionnaire Child Form at follow-up. Secondary analyses concerned comparing levels of parental characteristics with normative data. Compared with controls, adolescents in the exercise group reported a decrease in social functioning when their parents had more anxiety/insomnia or severe depression themselves. Adolescents also reported a decrease in social functioning when their parents showed poorer overall mental health themselves. Parents reported comparable or even better mental health compared with normative data. The effect of a standardized exercise program on HRQoL changes in adolescents with ToF or a Fontan circulation is moderated by parental mental health, more specifically by parental anxiety/insomnia and severe depression. The trial registration number of this article is NTR2731 (www.trialregister.nl).


Congenital Heart Disease | 2014

Effect of exercise training on sports enjoyment and leisure-time spending in adolescents with complex congenital heart disease: the moderating effect of health behavior and disease knowledge.

Karolijn Dulfer; Nienke Duppen; Nico A. Blom; Arie P.J. van Dijk; W.A. Helbing; Frank C. Verhulst; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of a standardized exercise program on sports enjoyment and leisure-time spending in adolescents with congenital heart disease and to know what the moderating impact of their baseline health behavior and disease knowledge is. METHODS Included were 93 patients, aged 10 to 25, with surgical repair for tetralogy of Fallot or with a Fontan circulation for single-ventricle physiology, of 5 participating centers of pediatric cardiology in The Netherlands. They were randomly allocated, stratified for age, gender, and type of congenital heart disease to a 12-week period with either: (1) three times per week standardized exercise training or (2) care as usual (randomization ratio 2:1). At baseline and after 12 weeks, participants completed Web-based questionnaires and were interviewed by phone. OUTCOME MEASURES Primary analyses tested changes from baseline to follow-up in sports enjoyment and leisure-time spending in the exercise group vs. control group. Secondary analyses concerned the moderating influence of baseline health behavior and disease knowledge on changes from baseline to follow-up, and comparison with normative data. RESULTS At follow-up, the exercise group reported a decrease in passive leisure-time spending (watching television and computer usage) compared with controls. Exercise training had no effect on sports enjoyment and active leisure-time spending. Disease knowledge had a moderating effect on improvement in sports enjoyment, whereas health behavior did not. Compared with normative data, patients obtained similar leisure time scores and lower frequencies as to drinking alcohol and smoking. CONCLUSIONS Exercise training decreased passive, but not active, leisure-time spending. It did not influence sports enjoyment.


Cardiology in The Young | 2016

Does functional health status predict health-related quality of life in children after Fontan operation?

Karolijn Dulfer; Sjoerd S.M. Bossers; Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens; Nienke Duppen; Irene M. Kuipers; Livia Kapusta; Gabriëlle G. van Iperen; Michiel Schokking; Arend D.J. ten Harkel; Tim Takken; Willem A. Helbing

PURPOSE It is important to identify those children with a Fontan circulation who are at risk for impaired health-related quality of life. We aimed to determine the predictive value of functional health status - medical history and present medical status - on both physical and psychosocial domains of health-related quality of life, as reported by patients themselves and their parents. METHODS We carried out a prospective cross-sectional multi-centre study in Fontan patients aged between 8 and 15, who had undergone staged completion of total cavopulmonary connection according to a current technique before the age of 7 years. Functional health status was assessed as medical history - that is, age at Fontan, type of Fontan, ventricular dominance, and number of cardiac surgical procedures - and present medical status - assessed with magnetic resonance imaging, exercise testing, and rhythm assessment. Health-related quality of life was assessed with The TNO/AZL Child Questionnaire Child Form and Parent Form. RESULTS In multivariate prediction models, several medical history variables, such as more operations post-Fontan completion, lower age at Fontan completion, and dominant right ventricle, and present medical status variables, such as smaller end-diastolic volume, a higher score for ventilatory efficiency, and the presence of sinus node dysfunction, predicted worse outcomes on several parent-reported and self-reported physical as well as psychosocial health-related quality of life domains. CONCLUSIONS Medical history and worse present medical status not only predicted worse physical parent-reported and self-reported health-related quality of life but also worse psychosocial health-related quality of life and subjective cognitive functioning. These findings will help in identifying patients who are at risk for developing impaired health-related quality of life.


Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2015

Regional Ventricular Performance and Exercise Training in Children and Young Adults After Repair of Tetralogy of Fallot Randomized Controlled Pilot Study

Nienke Duppen; Lianne M. Geerdink; Irene M. Kuipers; Sjoerd S.M. Bossers; Laurens P. Koopman; Arie P.J. van Dijk; Jolien W. Roos-Hesselink; Chris L. de Korte; Willem A. Helbing; Livia Kapusta

Background—Public-health guidelines recommend patients with congenital heart disease to exercise. Studies have shown that patients with congenital heart disease can improve physical exercise capacity. The effect of training on regional ventricular performance has hardly been studied. We performed a pilot study to assess whether an exercise training program would result in adverse changes of regional ventricular performance in patients with corrected tetralogy of Fallot. Methods and Results—Multicenter prospective randomized controlled pilot study in patients with tetralogy of Fallot aged 10 to 25 years. A 12-week standardized aerobic dynamic exercise training program (3 one-hour sessions per week) was used. Pre- and post-training cardiopulmonary exercise tests, MRI, and echocardiography, including tissue-Doppler imaging, were performed. Patients were randomized to the exercise group (n=28) or control group (n=20). One patient in the exercise group dropped out. Change in tissue-Doppler imaging parameters was similar in the exercise group and control group (change in right ventricle free wall peak velocity E′ exercise group, 0.8±2.6 cm/s; control group, 0.9±4.1; peak velocity A′ exercise group, 0.4±2.4 m/s; control group 4.6±18.1 cm/s). Conclusions—This randomized controlled pilot study provides preliminary data suggesting that regional ventricular performance is well maintained during 3-month aerobic dynamic exercise training in children and young adults with repaired tetralogy of Fallot. This information might help patients adhere to current public-health guidelines. Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http//:www.trialregister.nl. Unique identifier: NTR2731.


Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2015

Regional Ventricular Performance and Exercise Training in Children and Young Adults After Repair of Tetralogy of FallotCLINICAL PERSPECTIVE: Randomized Controlled Pilot Study

Nienke Duppen; Lianne M. Geerdink; Irene M. Kuipers; Sjoerd S.M. Bossers; Laurens P. Koopman; Arie P.J. van Dijk; Jolien W. Roos-Hesselink; Chris L. de Korte; Willem A. Helbing; Livia Kapusta

Background—Public-health guidelines recommend patients with congenital heart disease to exercise. Studies have shown that patients with congenital heart disease can improve physical exercise capacity. The effect of training on regional ventricular performance has hardly been studied. We performed a pilot study to assess whether an exercise training program would result in adverse changes of regional ventricular performance in patients with corrected tetralogy of Fallot. Methods and Results—Multicenter prospective randomized controlled pilot study in patients with tetralogy of Fallot aged 10 to 25 years. A 12-week standardized aerobic dynamic exercise training program (3 one-hour sessions per week) was used. Pre- and post-training cardiopulmonary exercise tests, MRI, and echocardiography, including tissue-Doppler imaging, were performed. Patients were randomized to the exercise group (n=28) or control group (n=20). One patient in the exercise group dropped out. Change in tissue-Doppler imaging parameters was similar in the exercise group and control group (change in right ventricle free wall peak velocity E′ exercise group, 0.8±2.6 cm/s; control group, 0.9±4.1; peak velocity A′ exercise group, 0.4±2.4 m/s; control group 4.6±18.1 cm/s). Conclusions—This randomized controlled pilot study provides preliminary data suggesting that regional ventricular performance is well maintained during 3-month aerobic dynamic exercise training in children and young adults with repaired tetralogy of Fallot. This information might help patients adhere to current public-health guidelines. Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http//:www.trialregister.nl. Unique identifier: NTR2731.

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Irene M. Kuipers

Boston Children's Hospital

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Willem A. Helbing

Boston Children's Hospital

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Sjoerd S.M. Bossers

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Karolijn Dulfer

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Livia Kapusta

Boston Children's Hospital

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Arie P.J. van Dijk

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Nico A. Blom

Leiden University Medical Center

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W.A. Helbing

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Chris L. de Korte

Radboud University Nijmegen

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