Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy. / Varga, Tibor V; Andersson, Åsa; Lauruschkus, Katarina; Tornberg, Åsa B.

In: Pediatric Exercise Science, Vol. 36, No. 1, 2024, p. 15-22.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Varga, TV, Andersson, Å, Lauruschkus, K & Tornberg, ÅB 2024, 'Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy', Pediatric Exercise Science, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 15-22. https://doi.org/10.1123/pes.2022-0093

APA

Varga, T. V., Andersson, Å., Lauruschkus, K., & Tornberg, Å. B. (2024). Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy. Pediatric Exercise Science, 36(1), 15-22. https://doi.org/10.1123/pes.2022-0093

Vancouver

Varga TV, Andersson Å, Lauruschkus K, Tornberg ÅB. Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy. Pediatric Exercise Science. 2024;36(1):15-22. https://doi.org/10.1123/pes.2022-0093

Author

Varga, Tibor V ; Andersson, Åsa ; Lauruschkus, Katarina ; Tornberg, Åsa B. / Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy. In: Pediatric Exercise Science. 2024 ; Vol. 36, No. 1. pp. 15-22.

Bibtex

@article{c177e1bdf5df4f5fa28cc0eab8a3a4a7,
title = "Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To investigate acute and long-term changes in hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers in nonambulant children with cerebral palsy in response to dynamic standing exercise.METHODS: Fourteen children with severe cerebral palsy were recruited. Anthropometrics and body composition measures were obtained. Physical activity levels before the study were assessed using hip-worn accelerometry. All children underwent a 30-minute dynamic standing exercise using the Innowalk standing aid. Respiratory data during exercise were collected using indirect calorimetry. Blood samples were collected before and after exercise. Blood samples were also obtained after two 16-week exercise protocols, in a resting state. Hormonal and inflammatory metabolites were measured from blood serum/plasma, and acute and long-term changes in biomarker levels were assessed using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.RESULTS: Of the 14 children at baseline, all had slightly/moderately/severely elevated C-reactive protein and cortisol levels. C-reactive protein levels were decreased following a 30-minute bout of dynamic standing (before exercise: 53 mg/L [interquartile range: 40-201]; after exercise: 39 mg/L [interquartile range: 20-107]; P = .04).CONCLUSIONS: We show that several hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers are dysregulated in children with cerebral palsy. Our preliminary results from a small, but deep-phenotyped prospective cohort indicate acute and long-term alterations of several biomarkers in response to exercise.",
author = "Varga, {Tibor V} and {\AA}sa Andersson and Katarina Lauruschkus and Tornberg, {{\AA}sa B}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1123/pes.2022-0093",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "15--22",
journal = "Pediatric Exercise Science",
issn = "0899-8493",
publisher = "Human Kinetics, Inc",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acute and Long-Term Changes in Blood-Borne Biomarkers in Response to Dynamic Standing in Nonambulant Children With Cerebral Palsy

AU - Varga, Tibor V

AU - Andersson, Åsa

AU - Lauruschkus, Katarina

AU - Tornberg, Åsa B

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - PURPOSE: To investigate acute and long-term changes in hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers in nonambulant children with cerebral palsy in response to dynamic standing exercise.METHODS: Fourteen children with severe cerebral palsy were recruited. Anthropometrics and body composition measures were obtained. Physical activity levels before the study were assessed using hip-worn accelerometry. All children underwent a 30-minute dynamic standing exercise using the Innowalk standing aid. Respiratory data during exercise were collected using indirect calorimetry. Blood samples were collected before and after exercise. Blood samples were also obtained after two 16-week exercise protocols, in a resting state. Hormonal and inflammatory metabolites were measured from blood serum/plasma, and acute and long-term changes in biomarker levels were assessed using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.RESULTS: Of the 14 children at baseline, all had slightly/moderately/severely elevated C-reactive protein and cortisol levels. C-reactive protein levels were decreased following a 30-minute bout of dynamic standing (before exercise: 53 mg/L [interquartile range: 40-201]; after exercise: 39 mg/L [interquartile range: 20-107]; P = .04).CONCLUSIONS: We show that several hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers are dysregulated in children with cerebral palsy. Our preliminary results from a small, but deep-phenotyped prospective cohort indicate acute and long-term alterations of several biomarkers in response to exercise.

AB - PURPOSE: To investigate acute and long-term changes in hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers in nonambulant children with cerebral palsy in response to dynamic standing exercise.METHODS: Fourteen children with severe cerebral palsy were recruited. Anthropometrics and body composition measures were obtained. Physical activity levels before the study were assessed using hip-worn accelerometry. All children underwent a 30-minute dynamic standing exercise using the Innowalk standing aid. Respiratory data during exercise were collected using indirect calorimetry. Blood samples were collected before and after exercise. Blood samples were also obtained after two 16-week exercise protocols, in a resting state. Hormonal and inflammatory metabolites were measured from blood serum/plasma, and acute and long-term changes in biomarker levels were assessed using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.RESULTS: Of the 14 children at baseline, all had slightly/moderately/severely elevated C-reactive protein and cortisol levels. C-reactive protein levels were decreased following a 30-minute bout of dynamic standing (before exercise: 53 mg/L [interquartile range: 40-201]; after exercise: 39 mg/L [interquartile range: 20-107]; P = .04).CONCLUSIONS: We show that several hormonal and inflammatory biomarkers are dysregulated in children with cerebral palsy. Our preliminary results from a small, but deep-phenotyped prospective cohort indicate acute and long-term alterations of several biomarkers in response to exercise.

U2 - 10.1123/pes.2022-0093

DO - 10.1123/pes.2022-0093

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37433523

VL - 36

SP - 15

EP - 22

JO - Pediatric Exercise Science

JF - Pediatric Exercise Science

SN - 0899-8493

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 361544977