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THE ATHLETE AND THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM ABNORMALITIES FOUND ON SCREENING • Well-trained endurance athletes have a • slow HR and large SV, which can produce normal pulmonic flow murmurs in young athletes, • Such murmurs typically disappear in sitting positon • Older athletes with hemodynamically insignificant aortic sclerosis may have aortic flow murmurs. ECG • Athletes can also have evidence on the of biatrial hypertrophy, LVH, incomplete right bundle branch block, ST-T wave abnormalities, and conduction abnormalities. • Most of these abnormalities occur in endurance athletes undergoing intense training. • Such changes in strength-trained athletes or in endurance athletes with low training volumes should raise suspicion of a cardiac problem ELEVATED “CARDIAC ENZYMES” I • endurance athletes may have elevated cTn levels after exertion • the possibility that prolonged exercise training produces myocardial fibrosis THE ATHLETE'S HEART • The athlete's heart refers to the clinical syndrome of • cardiac chamber enlargement, • hypertrophy, • normal or augmented ventricular systolic function • commonly accompanied by • sinus arrhythmia, • sinus bradycardia • systolic flow murmur SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH IN THE ATHLETE • these events occur with an incidence of 2.3 per 100,000 athletes • The frequency of sudden death in female is lower than in males • < 35 years of age : HCM, ARVD, and congenital coronary artery abnormalities • > 35 years : CAD SUDDEN CARDIAC ARREST IN ATHLETES WITH HCM • ventricular tachyarrhythmias mediated by multiple factors • hemodynamic compromise or • primary ventricular arrhythmias CAD • If an athlete is identified as being at risk for coronary artery disease or if symptoms suggest ischemia, an exercise stress test should be performed. • Stress testing is also recommended in males older than 40 years of age or females older than 50 years of age on the presence of at least two risk factors other than age and sex or one marked abnormal finding • In older athletes without chest pain and risk factors, the routine use of exercise testing is limited by its low specificity and pretest probability • Approximately 10% of young athletes who die suddenly with exercise have no evidence of structural heart diseases • in many such patients, the cause of sudden death is likely a primary electrical heart disease. • WPW , • long QT syndrome, • short QT syndrome, • Brugada syndrome, • catecholaminergic polymorphic VT CLINICAL EVALUATION OF THE ATHLETE WITH SYMPTOMS CHEST PAIN • is a common complaint • Chest discomfort in athletes should never be dismissed summarily. • The sensation of momentary chest pain may accompany • premature atrial or ventricular beats. • muscle and joint issues ARRHYTHMIA • the presence or absence of structural heart disease, • family medical history • palpitations are frequently benign; • presyncope and certainly syncope are more concerning, • resuscitated sudden death is a major concern. SYNCOPE • common symptom • Syncope without prodromal symptoms or occurring at peak exercise is more concerning • Injury secondary to syncope is more often seen in arrhythmic disorders. WORKUP FOR SYNCOPE • ECG • echocardiogram. • exercise tolerance test : • In athletes older than 35 years of age and • those with syncope during exertion FAMILIAL HISTORY • the presence of early sudden death or hereditary cardiac abnormality in the family of an athlete should prompt a thorough cardiac workup regardless of the presenting symptoms DECREASED EXERCISE CAPACITY • Decrements in any of these components can adversely affect exercise performance • • • • CV components (HR and the A-V O2 difference) central nervous system lungs skeletal muscle DECREASED EXERCISE CAPACITY • hyperthyroidism • exercise-induced asthma, • diseases of skeletal muscle, • anemia • arrhytmia • viral illnesses DECREASED EXERCISE CAPACITY • occult coronary disease • LV diastolic dysfunction • “borderline hypertension” • Psychological factors • overtraining OVERTRAINING • is a complex interaction of psychological and physiologic fatigue • Diminished exercise tolerance (sometimes with an elevated resting HR), the sensation of nocturnal fevers, and insomnia all characterize overtraining. • Overtraining should be diagnosed only when other conditions are excluded • requires a therapeutic trial of markedly reduced training PERFORMANCEENHANCING SUBSTANCES • The dietary supplement ephedra (Ma-huang), for example, is associated with life-threatening toxicity and death • Anabolic steroids are associated with premature coronary disease and sudden death. • cocaine are associated with fatal myocardial infarction, sudden death, and stroke. VALVE DISEASE IN ATHLETES AORTIC STENOSIS • careful evaluation • “warm-up dyspnea” frequently indicates clinically important AS. AORTIC REGURGITATION • generally tolerate well • Not restrict athletic competition and resistance exercise severe AR • restrict if evidence of ventricular deterioration. BICUSPID AORTIC VALVE (BAV) • restrict activity if the aortic diameter is greater than 45 mm, • evaluate athletes annually with an aortic size of 40 to 45 mm. • Athletes found to have a BAV valve should undergo some form of imaging and then serial imaging THE CARDIOVASCULAR RISKS OF EXERCISE • evidence has shown that vigorous physical activity, generally defined as six or more METS, transiently increases the risk for (SCD) and (AMI)