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POLICY AND PRACTICE REVIEWS article

Front. Pediatr., 31 May 2023
Sec. Pediatric Cardiology

Core components of a rehabilitation program in pediatric cardiac disease

\r\nAna Ubeda Tikkanen,,,
Ana Ubeda Tikkanen1,2,3,4*Joshua VovaJoshua Vova5Lainie HolmanLainie Holman6Maddie ChrismanMaddie Chrisman7Kristin ClarksonKristin Clarkson8Rachel SantiagoRachel Santiago9Lisa SchonbergerLisa Schonberger9Kelsey WhiteKelsey White9Daryaneh BadalyDaryaneh Badaly10Naomi GauthierNaomi Gauthier11Tam Dan N. PhamTam Dan N. Pham12Jolie J. BrittJolie J. Britt12Scott E. CrouterScott E. Crouter13Maeve GiangregorioMaeve Giangregorio11Meena NathanMeena Nathan2Unoma O. Akamagwuna,\r\nUnoma O. Akamagwuna14,15
  • 1Department of Pediatric Rehabilitation, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
  • 2Department of Cardiac Surgery, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
  • 3Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
  • 4Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
  • 5Department of Physiatry, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, GA, United States
  • 6Department Pediatric Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, United States
  • 7Wolff Center, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
  • 8Department of Pediatric Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
  • 9Department of Otolaryngology and Communication Enhancement, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
  • 10Learning and Development Center, Child Mind Institute, New York, NY, United States
  • 11Department of Cardiology, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, United States
  • 12Department of Pediatric Cardiology, Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, United States
  • 13Department of Kinesiology, Recreation, and Sport Studies, The University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, IL, United States
  • 14Department Pediatric Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, United States
  • 15Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Baylor College of Medicine, TX, United States

There is increasing effort in both the inpatient and outpatient setting to improve care, function, and quality of life for children with congenital heart disease, and to decrease complications. As the mortality rates of surgical procedures for congenital heart disease decrease, improvement in perioperative morbidity and quality of life have become key metrics of quality of care. Quality of life and function in patients with congenital heart disease can be affected by multiple factors: the underlying heart condition, cardiac surgery, complications, and medical treatment. Some of the functional areas affected are motor abilities, exercise capacity, feeding, speech, cognition, and psychosocial adjustment. Rehabilitation interventions aim to enhance and restore functional ability and quality of life for those with physical impairments or disabilities. Interventions such as exercise training have been extensively evaluated in adults with acquired heart disease, and rehabilitation interventions for pediatric patients with congenital heart disease have similar potential to improve perioperative morbidity and quality of life. However, literature regarding the pediatric population is limited. We have gathered a multidisciplinary team of experts from major institutions to create evidence- and practice-based guidelines for pediatric cardiac rehabilitation programs in both inpatient and outpatient settings. To improve the quality of life of pediatric patients with congenital heart disease, we propose the use of individualized multidisciplinary rehabilitation programs that include: medical management; neuropsychology; nursing care; rehabilitation equipment; physical, occupational, speech, and feeding therapies; and exercise training.

1. Introduction

In pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD), postcardiac surgery morbidity and mortality have decreased over the past decades. In the United States, survival in the first year of life for children with critical CHD (i.e., those for whom surgery or intervention is needed) is 75.2% vs. 97.1% for those with non-critical CHD (1). However, a growing body of research has found that some pediatric patients with CHD experience long-term functional impairment and some degree of disability following surgery, particularly concerning functional outcomes (2, 3), neurodevelopment (3, 4), and exercise capacity (5, 6).

There are only a few pediatric cardiac rehabilitation programs and there is little published research about their effectiveness. Recent research showed that almost half of patients that undergo surgery for CHD required some sort of rehabilitation therapy in the acute postoperative period (2). In contrast, in adults with acquired heart disease, the benefits of post-surgical cardiac rehabilitation have been widely proven. However, only 10%–20% of those adult patients who would benefit from this type of intervention participate in a rehabilitation program (7).

Rehabilitation management of pediatric cardiac patients frequently starts in the inpatient acute setting, especially for children with severe cardiac defects who spend a significant amount of time in the hospital, and it continues in the outpatient setting (2). Of those pediatric programs documented in the literature, most use a team format, and they include inpatient acute care programs, home-based programs, and outpatient-based programs. The outpatient exercise training programs have demonstrated the safety and feasibility of their particular models of management, and they measure patient improvement using outcome metrics such as maximal oxygen consumption, exercise tolerance, and quality of life (8).

We offer these definitions for the reader's ease:

“Neurodevelopment” refers to the neurologic and developmental trajectory of a child.

“Functional outcomes” refer to the neurodevelopmental trajectory of children as well as their reported re-integration into their communities, ability to gain independence, and overall quality of life.

“Function” is a key tenet in rehabilitation and encompasses all aspects of daily life, including mobility, communication, feeding, and other activities of daily living.

“Rehabilitation management” includes an interdisciplinary approach to improving function as defined previously. We include key components of this rehabilitation team further in this paper.

In this paper, we briefly discuss the functional deficits in CHD and then explore the potential role of each member of the multidisciplinary pediatric cardiac rehabilitation team in addressing them (Table 1). We then propose a framework for multidisciplinary pediatric cardiac rehabilitation in both inpatient and outpatient settings (Figure 1), and we highlight the unique considerations of such programs for pediatric CHD vs. those addressing adult-acquired heart disease.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Roadmap.

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Roles of the multidisciplinary team.

2. Our goal

Our goal is to provide a framework for developing a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program to improve long-term function and quality of life for pediatric patients with CHD. In the course of this paper we will:

• Increase awareness of specific functional complications related to CHD

• Provide a rehabilitation framework for pediatric patients with CHD

• Offer recommendations to decrease the functional impact of CHD surgery and associated complications

• Provide recommendations to improve the quality of life in pediatric patients with CHD

• Give guidance on educating parents and patients to help decrease anxiety regarding physical activity

• Promote a cardio-healthy lifestyle with physical activity and an appropriate heart-healthy diet, decrease CV risk factors, and increase medication compliance

• Demonstrate how to provide functional support throughout childhood and into adulthood

• Provide guidance on helping pediatric patients achieve maximum independence

We believe there are two essential time points for providing rehabilitation care for pediatric patients with CHD (Figure 2).

Acute post-surgery (Phase I): In this period, the aim is to decrease the acute functional impact of the surgical intervention and possible post-surgical complications, and facilitate the transition home. Acute post-surgery care can take place in the acute medical setting, acute inpatient rehabilitation or a long-term acute care setting. This phase is more relevant in CHD vs. adults with acquired heart disease.

Post-surgery (Phase II): This subacute phase, which is analogous to the same phase in acquired heart disease, includes exercise training for older pediatric patients and cardiovascular risk factor management adapted to the functional needs of the pediatric patient population. Additional outpatient rehabilitation therapy services may also be needed.

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Rehabilitation settings.

3. Functional deficits in CHD

3.1. Neurologic

Children born with complex CHD have smaller and more immature brains at birth compared to children without CHD (9). This brain immaturity could increase the risk of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), which is associated with cerebral palsy, after cardiac surgery. The most common cause of stroke in children is CHD itself or the surgery for CHD. Additionally, brain injury affects 55% of neonates in the peri-cardiac surgery period, with most of these cases being PVL (10). In patients who require extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support, stroke incidence is higher—around 12.3% (11). For patients who required a ventricular assist device (VAD), the incidence of having at least one stroke is 29% (12). This neurologic injury makes them susceptible to having some form of motor, speech, cognitive, or feeding disability, which in turn affects their activities of daily living.

Longer-term abnormal neurodevelopment outcomes have been extensively described in patients with CHD (3, 13). These deficits are varied, affecting areas of functioning such as language (14), executive function (15), and visual processing (16) skills, and they can adversely affect school performance and quality of life. Multiple risk factors have been identified, including chronic cyanosis, genetic and syndromic abnormalities, medical and surgical therapies, brain injury, comorbidities, and a lack of exposure to normal developmental stimuli in the intensive care unit (ICU) (13).

As more neurodevelopmental follow-up programs are established and refined, neurologists, psychologists, neuropsychologists, and other health providers have outlined their experiences and recommendations for the care of children with congenital heartdefects (17, 18). In addition, the American Heart Associationandthe American Academy of Pediatrics have published their respective guidelines for the evaluation and management of developmental and neuropsychological outcomes among children with CHD (13). Most recently, the Cardiac Neurodevelopmental Outcome Collaborative provided guidance on developmental evaluations from birth through age 5 and on neuropsychological evaluations for school-age children (1819).Although these collective recommendations and guidelines arecritical in directingthe neurodevelopmental care of childrenwith CHD, theydo not specifically address the functionalneeds of CHD patients. Our framework attempts to fill this critical gap.

3.2. Feeding

Feeding difficulties are not uncommon in patients with CHD (20). Up to 50% of neonates with complex CHD require tube feeding at discharge following cardiac surgery (21). These feeding disorders can persist over time in over 20% of these patients (22). The etiology of feeding difficulties is thought to be multifactorial: abnormal development of the operculum in the brain of patients with complex CHD that is related to feeding and speech difficulties (9); decreased intake or increased energetic expenditure in heart failure (23); brain injury (24); vocal cord dysfunction (25); suck-swallow-breathe discoordination; laryngopharyngeal dysfunction (26); and reflux or oral aversion after prolonged intubation. Feeding difficulties can lead to complications such as aspirations (27), prolonged hospitalization, and, importantly, an adverse effect on patients' growth and development (28).

3.3. Speech and language

In CHD, speech and language difficulties include delays and/or impairments in the motor and cognitive aspects of communicative functioning (2931), which can range in severity from mild to severe. Deficits in speech production, including articulation or phonological disorders, motor speech disorders, voice and/or resonance disorders, and dysfluencies may also be present (32). Patients are at risk of receptive and/or expressive language difficulties, as well as challenges in social pragmatics that may be part of autism spectrum disorder or in isolation (29, 33). Finally, it is not uncommon in this patient population to observe language-based learning disabilities and deficits in attention and executive functioning, which can also impact communicative functioning (34).

3.4. Exercise capacity

An active lifestyle plays a critical role in health outcomes. As noted above, neurological and cognitive impairments can also impact exercise capacity and physical activity. Thus, it is important to consider all aspects of health-related fitness. This is important because exercise and physical activity are two different constructs (the former is a subcomponent of the latter) and each can result in different outcomes, all of which are important to long-term health in complex CHD.

Patients with complex CHD tend to have lower median oxygen consumption (peak VO2), the gold standard measurement of peak aerobic exercise capacity (35), which in this patient population is related to morbidity and mortality (6, 36). A number of studies have shown that decreased exercise capacity can improve with physical activity in patients with CHD (37). Limited literature is available at this time on pediatric CHD patients and improvement in outcomes. However, recent data suggests that exercise training in children with CHD may improve exercise parameters as well as quality of life, without serious adverse outcomes (38, 39). In addition to peak VO2, it is important to understand other health-related components of a patient's fitness, including movement deficits, muscular fitness, barriers to physical activity, and physical activity preferences.

4. The rehabilitation framework

We believe rehabilitation intervention in CHD patients should be a multidisciplinary team effort. We describe the potential team members and their roles in Table 1. While the roles are described as independent, there is significant overlap between different professionals in both assessments and interventions. Different functional impairments might be addressed in multiple rehabilitation therapy domains, such as deconditioning or weakness treated with both physical therapy and exercise training.

4.1. Inpatient rehabilitation in CHD (Phase I)

Inpatient rehabilitation generally takes place in the hospital setting after cardiac surgery or hospitalization for heart failure. With guidance from the cardiology and cardiovascular surgery team, plans for therapeutic rehabilitation interventions should be developed and initiated as soon as possible to optimize mobility and prevent complications during the post-CHD and -transplant surgical course. As most acute medical inpatient settings have limited physical and occupational therapy resources, inpatient rehabilitation management frequently falls to the bedside nursing staff. Nurses are also among the first care team members to interact with and assess post-operative patients; in the ICU, early assessment and recognition of neurological, vocal, feeding, and motor abilities begin immediately after surgery thus increasing the opportunity for more timely rehabilitation interventions.

While monitoring the patient's tolerance to aerobic and therapeutic exercise, physiatrists can ensure therapeutic activities are aligned with the patient's goals, medical status, and function. During the hospital course, the physiatrist will assess and determine the appropriate level of rehabilitation services required after discharge, such as inpatient rehabilitation, an intensive day rehabilitation program, or an outpatient rehabilitation plan. Maintenance of safe activity is critical at this juncture to mitigate the effects of debility known to occur in the acute inpatient setting. In the pediatric population, minimal adverse outcomes have been reported with early mobilization programs and they are often used by bedside nursing (40).

There is already a precedent for inpatient pediatric rehabilitation for patients with heart failure and for those with ventricular assist devices (8). Patients in these programs have, on average, three to five sessions of therapy per week, with no adverse effects reported. With this existing framework in mind, we make the following proposals for implementing a pediatric rehabilitation program in the inpatient setting.

4.1.1. Nursing

Nurses are unique in that they are among the first team members to assess patients' functional health and they also spend the most direct care time with patients. Nursing assessments, therefore, provide early and rapid evaluation of potential threats to functional health, allowing for more timely communication with the overseeing provider and necessary specialists. Nursing is also able to institute supportive interventions for vocal, feeding, and motor disabilities before a patient is deemed ready for formal physical and occupational therapies. Once a patient is screened by physiatry and the rehabilitation therapists, nursing plays an essential role in ensuring therapy recommendations are tolerated by the patient and, if so, followed. Nursing also plays a large role in patient education, including but not limited to medication management, symptom awareness and management, and discharge readiness, all of which are specific to each patient. When transfer to an inpatient rehabilitation facility is likely, nursing plays a significant role in guiding and preparing the patient and family for that transition.

4.1.2. Physical and occupational therapy

Physical and occupational therapy plays a vital role in caring for pediatric patients who are hospitalized for CHD. These patients are at increased risk of prolonged immobility, which often results in long-term sequelae that can be best supported through a wide range of therapeutic activities. These activities begin with early mobilization, i.e., a patient's active participation in therapeutic activity within 48–72 h of admission, upon hemodynamic stability, or when the medical team deems it appropriate (40, 41).

The goals of care for physical therapy and occupational therapy are to maximize functional mobility and independence while minimizing the deleterious effects of bedrest and to prevent deconditioning; to assess and facilitate achievement of developmental milestones and to help provide appropriate recommendations for follow-up services upon discharge.

The child should be examined and evaluated for physical and occupational therapy, with individualized interventions (Tables 24) recommended that are neurodevelopmentally appropriate and specific to the child's functional deficits.

TABLE 2
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Table 2. Clinical assessment and education considerations for physical and occupational therapy.

TABLE 3
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Table 3. Assessment and intervention considerations for physical therapy (as applicable, assessment and intervention should be patient specific and not all of the following variables may be included depending on patients age, cognitive level, needs, etc.).

TABLE 4
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Table 4. Assessment and intervention considerations for occupational therapy (as applicable, assessment and intervention should be patient specific and not all of the following variables may be included depending on patients age, cognitive level, needs, etc.)

4.1.3. Speech and language therapy

Children with CHD are vulnerable to speech and language delays (2931) which may warrant consultation with speech and language pathologist (SLP) services. These include baseline communication challenges, acute changes (e.g., due to stroke, vocal cord paralysis, ventilation requirements, etc.), or the effects of prolonged hospitalization. Early consultation may facilitate ongoing developmental support, communication access and patient-provider communication, and maintenance of skills. Table 5 outlines additional considerations for inpatient assessment of, and interventions for, speech, language, and communication needs in children with CHD.

TABLE 5
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Table 5. Assessment and intervention considerations for speech, language, and communication: (as applicable, assessment and intervention should be patient specific and not all of the following variables may be included depending on patients age, cognitive level, needs, etc.).

4.1.4. Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC)

If a patient presents as non-speaking or with functional communication difficulty (e.g., due to mechanical ventilation), the use of AAC strategies may be required to establish reliable communication during hospitalization (45). The SLP should conduct a feature-matched assessment by matching the patient's strengths, skills, and needs to available tools and strategies (46), which may include a variety of no-tech, low-tech (e.g., communication boards, writing tools), and high-technology (e.g., speech-generating devices). If the child has receptive language issues, communication partners can use strategies to supplement language input. It should be noted that AAC does not impede the development of spoken language (47, 48) and may in fact increase speech production (49).

4.1.5. Feeding and swallowing

Regardless of cardiac anatomy, all patients with CHD are at risk for feeding difficulties (50), failure to thrive, and dysphagia (20). Feeding difficulties and dysphagia are thought to be related to many of the concomitant issues mentioned above. Many newborns are discharged home with feeding tubes, given the difficulty of transitioning to full oral feeds (51). Infants benefit from early feeding interventions pre-operatively, as well as post-operatively, to avoid the need for gastrostomy placement (52). Research has demonstrated that infants with feeding difficulties are at increased risk of feeding struggles that persist in childhood (50), and therefore early speech-language pathology involvement is imperative.

Feeding assessment and management both for the in- and outpatient setting are further detailed in Tables 6, 7.

TABLE 6
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Table 6. General assessment considerations for feeding.

TABLE 7
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Table 7. Feeding and swallowing Management in the pediatric acute in and outpatient care setting: Assessment considerations (as applicable, assessments should be patient specific and not all of the following variables may be included during assessment depending on the patient's age, cognitive level, risk assessment, etc.) the screening, assessment, and intervention should be patient-specific and account for neurological etiology (e.g. stroke), cognition (e.g. attention to task, sedation, etc.), sensory domains (e.g. vision and hearing), and age.

4.1.6. Psychology and neuropsychology

4.1.6.1. Psychological and neuropsychological screening

Children in ICUs and those in inpatient medical and rehabilitation units can benefit from systematic and focused psychological and neuropsychological consultation to: identify those with the highest risk of developmental, cognitive, and psychosocial concerns; aid with connecting patients and families with needed support; prepare children and families for the next stages of recovery; and provide guidance on additional neuropsychologic and developmental evaluation throughout recovery (58, 59). For more details see Table 8.

TABLE 8
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Table 8. Psychological and neuropsychological evaluation and intervention.

A portion of children in cardiac ICUs display delirium, a clinical syndrome with acute disturbance in consciousness and cognition that can fluctuate throughout the day (70). In many ICUs, regular screening for delirium is being implemented. However, it should be noted that patients can screen positive for delirium in cases of hypnotic-related iatrogenic withdrawal (71), the anticholinergic syndrome (72), brain injury, developmental delays, or neuroirritability. Misdiagnoses have significant implications for medical management and outcomes (73). Even though the symptoms of many patients with delirium resolve rapidly (likely because the delirium was a temporary effect of anesthesia or sedation), a portion have persistent symptoms during their intensive care stay.

4.1.6.2. Psychological care

Families of infants with CHD need family-centered care in cardiac ICUs, as the stress of hospitalization can have long-lasting developmental and psychosocial implications (21). Pediatric mental health providers should be readily available in inpatient units, not only to address the distress associated with critical illness and lengthy hospital stays but also to foster healthy behaviors, promote treatment compliance, and help develop self-efficacy (74). This is particularly important for older children and adolescents. Psychological care is further detailed in Table 8.

4.1.7. Discharge planning from acute in-hospital stays

Patients may require additional rehabilitation support upon discharge, depending on the complexity of their cardiac disease and their medical needs, skilled nursing needs, and functional level at discharge. This additional support may include acute inpatient rehabilitation, outpatient interventions, or home-based care.

Inpatient options:

• Discharge to acute inpatient rehabilitation, in which the focus is on the continued delivery of acute medical management, required skilled nursing care, and intensive attention to function. Patients receive three hours of rehabilitation therapy per day.

• Discharge to long-term acute care (LTAC), where the goal is to provide medical management and necessary skilled nursing care. There is no minimum amount of required therapy.

Outpatient options:

• Discharge to early intervention services or school-based therapies, pending qualification for such services.

• Discharge to an outpatient rehabilitation therapy program.

• School-based rehabilitation therapies and accommodations.

4.2. Outpatient Rehabilitation Program (Phase II)

Outpatient rehabilitation for children is equivalent to Phase II of Cardiac Rehabilitation in Adults with Acquired Heart Disease. However, since surgery in pediatric patients can occur in infancy or early childhood, outpatient rehabilitation may need to be initiated several years after the initial surgery. This is because certain functional difficulties or disabilities may not be recognized until several years after initial surgery and/or the patients might be too young to participate in certain types of rehabilitation therapy. However, when feasible, interventions should start early and be adapted to the appropriate developmental needs of each CHD patient.

This phase of rehabilitation should include aspects of the more classical cardiac rehabilitation program suggested by the American Heart Association (AHA) (75) and American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation (AACPVR) (76), such as exercise training, but adapted to meet the unique rehabilitation needs of children and adolescents (as previously described in these recommendations).

4.2.1. Physical and occupational therapy

Physical and occupational therapy are an essential part of the outpatient rehabilitation program. The goals, assessments, and interventions of both physical and occupational therapy are similar in the inpatient and outpatient settings. These have been extensively detailed in our recommendations for inpatient care and would similarly apply to the outpatient setting (Tables 24).

4.2.2. Exercise training

Low exercise capacity is a predictor of hospitalization and death for children with CHD (5, 36). A number of studies have demonstrated that exercise training improves peak VO2 after CHD surgery in children and adolescents (37, 7779) and no adverse effects have been noted (Tables 911).

TABLE 9
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Table 9. General considerations for exercise training.

TABLE 10
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Table 10. Exercise training program.

TABLE 11
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Table 11. Precautions and considerations for exercise training in congenital heart disease.

The goal of outpatient exercise training (both pre- and postoperatively) is to not only improve exercise capacity and physical activity but also provide the patient with tools and support to become as functional and independent as possible and to improve their overall quality of life. Over the past few years, there has been a major effort to develop more structured cardiac rehabilitation/exercise training programs (39, 80, 81) to provide a framework for these types of interventions. However, the effect of structured rehabilitation/exercise training programs on patient outcomes has yet to be demonstrated.

4.2.3. Speech and language therapy

4.2.3.1 Outpatient speech and language assessment

Throughout their childhood, children with CHD often require periodic monitoring of their speech and language development on an outpatient basis (13). Assessments provided by a speech-language pathologist consider the child's age, individual needs and skills, and etiology of deficits (e.g., developmental vs. acquired). Evaluations may target a range of speech, language, pragmatic, and cognitive skills using standardized testing, criterion-referenced measures, and clinical observation to collect diagnostic information (31). Table 5 outlines possible components and considerations for a comprehensive evaluation of speech, language, and related skills in children with CHD.

4.2.3.2 Outpatient speech and language intervention

The typical goal of speech and language intervention is to optimize overall communicative function, thereby supporting social and academic potential, enhancing emotional well-being, reducing frustration, and improving overall quality of life. Treatment frequency and intensity may change over time based on the number and types of skill areas targeted and the consolidation of learned skills (9598). Outpatient therapies may be supported in community clinics (e.g., hospital or private clinics and centers), early intervention programs, or in schools (in either individual or group settings.) Children less able to use spoken language to support daily communication may also need augmentative and alternative communication strategies. Over time, changes in health status or the need for subsequent cardiac surgery may impact communication skills and/or the type of intervention approach required to maximize benefit. Therefore, ongoing monitoring and multidisciplinary coordination are recommended. Table 5 details outpatient speech assessment and intervention.

4.3. Feeding and swallowing

4.3.1. Outpatient feeding and swallowing evaluation

Evaluation of feeding and swallowing function is based on current skills, age, nutritional needs, and parental preferences/concerns. Those who required assisted feeding preoperatively are at greater risk of being discharged with a feeding tube (51). For infants, assessment typically focuses on bottle feeding and/or breastfeeding, with a comprehensive evaluation of the infant's sucking skills, coordination of the nutritive sucking pattern, and endurance for feeding. Infants who undergo cardiac surgery within the first month of life may demonstrate feeding difficulties that span the first two or more years of life (99) and therefore benefit from subsequent evaluation. Assessments in children focus on a larger variety of drinking delivery methods and food textures to evaluate oral motor skills, swallowing, and sensory-based feeding difficulties. Table 6 further outlines feeding and swallowing assessment methods and considerations for infants and children with CHD (Table 6).

4.3.2. Outpatient feeding and swallowing intervention

Outpatient feeding and swallowing intervention plans are determined based on the evaluation of patients’ skills, areas of need, age, and service availability. Infant feeding treatment typically targets changes in the feeding environment, positioning during feeding, nipple flow rate, or other therapeutic interventions to improve the feeding dynamic. As indicated, treatment may also target oral aversion and feeding difficulties for infants who do not yet accept oral feeding. Therapeutic interventions are recommended when aspiration is observed during the instrumental assessment. When patients do not respond to these interventions, altered liquid consistencies may be trialed with close monitoring and in collaboration with the medical team due to potential gastrointestinal morbidities.

Children may present with feeding difficulties that are multi-factorial, including oral-motor delays, sensory-based difficulties, learned behavioral difficulties, and ongoing or newly acquired aspiration. Longer-term intervention plans may be established to support these needs. Given the sometimes slow and gradual progression of skills and potentially complex difficulties demonstrated by children, caregiver education and counseling are also typically provided (Table 7).

4.4. Psychology and neuropsychology

4.4.1. Psychological and neuropsychological evaluations

Patients with CHD should be screened for developmental, neuropsychological, and psychosocial concerns in the outpatient setting; this can help the rehabilitation team individualize targets and services for each patient. For guidelines on the recommended timing of follow-up evaluations, assessment tools, and special testing considerations, readers are referred to the guidelines for neurodevelopmental follow-up clinics with children with congenital heart defects (13, 18, 19) (Table 8).

4.4.2. Psychological care

Psychologists and neuropsychologists in outpatient rehabilitation programs can provide cognitive rehabilitation designed to teach specific cognitive skills and establish compensatory mechanisms for impaired cognitive domains (Table 8). Psychologists can also help foster healthy behaviors; promote treatment compliance; address emotional distress, disruptive behaviors, and social skills deficits; and support pain management and sleep hygiene. Some patients might benefit from additional evaluation by psychiatry. In addition, psychologists may be involved in mental health interventions for families, who are at risk of traumatic stress and other concerns (100) and whose mental health can impact the beneficial effect of exercise training programs on pediatric patients' quality of life (101).

Psychological care may improve not only psychosocial health but also physical health. In a meta-analysis of 23 randomized controlled trials involving adult cardiac patients, psychological care reduced emotional distress and improved systolic blood pressure, heart rate, and cholesterol levels (101). In a study of a pediatric cardiac rehabilitation program with a stress management component, physiological measurements were similarly improved, although the study did not separate the effects of exercise training, health education, and stress management (67). Research has also found associations between physical and emotional health among youths who have completed cardiac rehabilitation (102), and between emotional health and daily physical activity among children with CHDs (38).

5. Discussion

Rehabilitation needs in pediatric patients with CHD are very different from those of adults with acquired heart disease. As such, rehabilitation programs for patients with CHD should be designed to support the array of functional difficulties described here, and this article provides a valuable framework for developing such programs. Given the lack of available literature and data on pediatric cardiac rehabilitation, we developed this framework based on expert recommendations regarding best practices. The individuals contributing to this article respectively have expertise in rehabilitation, cardiology, cardiac surgery, and neuropsychology, all with a specific focus on our target pediatric population. Our framework addresses rehabilitation in both the inpatient and outpatient settings and incorporates roles for a multidisciplinary pediatric cardiac rehabilitation team. Further research is needed to quantify the impact of these multidisciplinary interventions and help us continue to tailor these programs to the specific needs of the pediatric cardiac population.

Author contributions

AT and UA contributed to guideline conception, design, writing and editing of the paper. JV, LH, MC, KC, RS, LS, KW, DB, NG, TP, JB, SC, MG, MN. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher's note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Abbreviations

CHD, congenital heart disease; CV, cardiovascular; PVL, periventricular leukomalacia, ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; VAD, ventricular assist device; ADLs, activities of daily living; ICU, intensive care unit; SLP, speech and language pathologist; AAC, augmentative and alternative communication; LTAC, long term acute care; QOL, quality of life.

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Keywords: children, heart, rehabilitation, function, cardiac

Citation: Ubeda Tikkanen A, Vova J, Holman L, Chrisman M, Clarkson K, Santiago R, Schonberger L, White K, Badaly D, Gauthier N, Pham TDN, Britt JJ, Crouter SE, Giangregorio M, Nathan M and Akamagwuna UO (2023) Core components of a rehabilitation program in pediatric cardiac disease. Front. Pediatr. 11:1104794. doi: 10.3389/fped.2023.1104794

Received: 22 November 2022; Accepted: 17 April 2023;
Published: 31 May 2023.

Edited by:

Dimpna Calila Albert-Brotons, King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre, Saudi Arabia

Reviewed by:

Patricia Longmuir, CHEO Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Canada
Constance G. Weismann, Lund University, Sweden

© 2023 Ubeda Tikkanen, Vova, Holman, Chrisman, Clarkson, Santiago, Schonberger, White, Badaly, Gauthier, Pham, Britt, Crouter, Giangregorio, Nathan and Akamagwuna. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Ana Ubeda Tikkanen ana.ubedatikkanen@childrens.harvard.edu

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