Member Center: Register | Log in

Search

web
      powered by

 

Home Page
Newsletters
Website Directory
Article Directory
Experts
Store
Inspirational Quotes
IQ & EQ Tests
Event Calendar
Discussion Board
Membership
Submit Your Articles
Submit Your Website
Advertising
About Us
Contact Us

Free Newsletter Sign Up


Great Ideas To Improve Your Life
950,000 Subscribers
...and Growing

 

 Self Improvement
 Natural Health
 Brain Improvement & IQ
 Home Business
 Daily Motivational Quote
 Selling and Sales Skills
 Loving Today -

 Relationships & Love

 Self Help Books


 

Free Self Improvement Goodies

FREE eBook of Michael Webb's "101 Romantic Ideas"
FREE Video/Audio - The Journey by Brandon Bays
FREE eBook "22 Success Lessons From Baseball"
7 Day Empowering Seeds eCourse by Coach Zev
"Secret Garden" guided meditation from Meditainment
FREE "Be Unstoppable" Starter Kit by Guy Finley
 

 


 

 

 
 

Very Safe Exercise
By Prabakar S

 

 

Email this article    Printer friendly page

Submit Your Articles
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 
Exercise tests are safe for young patients with a heart condition, even those awaiting a heart transplant, according to recent research at The Children’s Hospital in Denver, Colorado. Exercise tests give doctors different information about the heart’s functioning than tests done with the patient at rest. In adults, a test of heart and lung efficiency during exercise is often a major factor in deciding who should get a life-saving organ.

However, the new findings, published recently in Pediatric Cardiology, suggest that children should continue to be evaluated differently. Heart conditions are fairly common in children about 1 in 100 babies has some kind of congenital heart defect. In very serious cases, where treatment with drugs and corrective surgery have failed or been ruled out, surgeons may have to transplant a healthy heart into an infant, child, or adolescent patient.

Although not a cure, transplants allow children to live much longer, healthier lives. Unfortunately there are always more children waiting for transplants than there are donors. In adults, the cut-off value is 14 mL O2/kg/min; patients scoring below that value usually join the heart transplant waiting list because extensive studies have shown that they can not survive long without a new heart. In children, a patient’s priority is related to a judgement of her current heart function, her future chances without a transplant, and other health factors. Once a donor is found, heart size and blood type come into the decision as well.

You're tired. You're gaining weight. You may not feel your best. Although most of the time these symptoms are normal during pregnancy, exercise may help provide some relief. Becoming active and exercising at least 30 minutes on most, if not all, days of the week can benefit your health. For more details visit www.soundbodytrainer.com




Author's Bio

Representing Very Safe Exercise in the website www.soundbodytrainer.com

 

 

 

Top of Page

 

Home | Articles | Free Newsletters | Discussion Board | Event Calendar | Self Help Experts | Self Improvement Store
Membership | Inspirational Quotes | IQ & EQ Tests | Complete Directory | Positive News | Media | Videos
Submit Articles | Submit Site | Terms Of Use & Disclaimer | Contact | Advertise | About Us

© 1996-2007 SelfGrowth.com. All rights reserved.