Pediatric MS Patients Can Benefit Greatly from Strenuous Physical Activity, Study Suggests

Patricia Silva, PhD avatar

by Patricia Silva, PhD |

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A recently published study in the journalĀ NeurologyĀ entitled “lowerĀ physical activity is associated with higher disease burden in pediatric multiple sclerosis” suggests pediatric patients with multiple sclerosis can benefit from engaging in regular moderate to strenuous activity, in that physical activity was linked to a noticeable reduction in fatigue, lesions, and relapse rates.

The study examinedĀ 31 pediatric patients with MS. Those who reported having regular moderate physical activity, as determined by theĀ Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ), were observed to have less sleep/rest and general fatigue symptoms. The researchers found the oppositeĀ to also be true, with those scoring higher on theĀ PedsQL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale reporting lower levels of moderate physical activity.

Thirteen patients had magnetic resonance imaging data available, all of which exhibited a notable relationship between more intense physical activity and lower T2 lesion volumes and yearly relapse rates. Specifically, the average lesion volume was 0.46 cm3 for six of the study’s participants who engaged in strenuous activity, while the seven whoĀ did not engage in strenuous exerciseĀ hadĀ much higher lesion volumes ofĀ 3.40 cm3. As for annual relapse rates, those whoĀ engaged in physical activity had a median rate of 0.5 per year, and those who were less active had a rate of 1.0 per year.

According to co-author E. Ann Yeah, the study’s findings suggestĀ ā€œa potential protective effect of strenuous [physical activity] in this population.” The team also pointed out that compared to patients withĀ monophasic acquired demyelinating syndrome (mono-ADS), MS patients reported much lower physical activity, at 0.0 compared to 27.0 metabolic equivalents, andĀ 40.0 versus 54.0 metabolic equivalents. Less than half of MS patients reported having any strenuous physical activity, compared to the 82.3% of mono-ADS patients that said they had physical activity.

The authors of the study explained that while this difference between MS and mono-ADS patients has yet to be fully understood, it could be related toĀ ā€œongoing disease activity, perceived limitations, or symptoms such as depression or fatigueā€. They also observed MS patients were more likely to report fatigue and depression, compared to mono-ADS patients.Ā ā€œThese future interventions have the potential to improve quality of life by attenuating symptoms such as depression and fatigue and potentially reducing the rate of disease progression.ā€