Athletic Heart Syndrome



Ovid: 5-Minute Sports Medicine Consult, The


Athletic Heart Syndrome
Justin Wright
Basics
Description
  • A benign condition consisting of physiologic adaptations to the increased cardiac workload of exercise. Its primary features are biventricular hypertrophy and bradycardia associated with normal systolic and diastolic function.
  • Many characteristics overlap with serious pathologic conditions. This makes the differentiation challenging and of paramount importance.
  • Synonym(s): Athlete's heart; Physiologic cardiac hypertrophy
Epidemiology
  • These changes are almost universal in highly trained athletes.
  • Often mistaken for pathologic conditions
Risk Factors
  • Chronic endurance exercise
  • Genetic predisposition
Etiology
  • Changes in cardiac structure vary based on type of exercise (1).
  • Dimensions of athlete's heart rarely exceed upper limits of normal
  • Dynamic exercise (eg, distance running):
    • Increased heart rate and stroke volume
    • Adaptive responses in the heart due to volume overload and increased systolic BP
    • Increase in left ventricular end-diastolic diameter with proportional increases in septal and free-wall thickness to normalize wall stress
  • Static exercise (eg, weight lifting, bodybuilding):
    • Marked increased peripheral resistance with smaller increases in heart rate and cardiac output
    • Increase in septal and free-wall thickness without increase in left ventricular end-diastolic diameter
  • Combined exercise (eg, cycling, rowing):
    • Extreme volume load and extreme pressure load
    • Largest increases in left ventricular end-diastolic diameter and septal and free-wall thickness
Diagnosis
History
  • Used to differentiate benign physiologic change from pathologic conditions
  • History of chest pain, dizziness, or syncope associated with exercise may be suggestive of pathology.
  • Inquire about heart disease risk factors, including HTN, hyperlipidemia, tobacco use, and family history of sudden cardiac death.
  • History of previously identified murmur should be investigated.
Physical Exam
  • Decreased body fat and increased muscle mass (generally very physically fit)
  • Pulse slow and often irregular (sinus bradycardia or bradycardia with 1st- and 2nd-degree blocks)
  • Grade 1 or 2 midsystolic murmurs (benign functional ejection murmur resolves with Valsalva maneuver)
  • 3rd and 4th heart sounds very common (benign filling sounds)
  • BP typically remains normal.
  • Laterally displaced left ventricular impulse
Diagnostic Tests & Interpretation
Imaging
  • Electrocardiography (2)[B]:
    • Rhythm:
      • Sinus bradycardia of 40–55 beats/min while at rest
      • Sinus pauses of more than 2 sec due to increased vagal tone
      • Wandering atrial pacemaker, found only in dynamic athletes
    • Atrioventricular block:
      • 1st-degree atrioventricular block present only at rest; P-R interval normalizes with exercise
      • 2nd-degree atrioventricular block present only at rest; Mobitz I (Wenckebach block) common in marathon runners
      • Higher-grade atrioventricular blocks (Mobitz II, 3rd-degree) rare in athletes; may be indicative of underlying heart disease
    • Voltage:
      • Left ventricular hypertrophy
      • Right ventricular hypertrophy, common in dynamic athletes, but rarely seen in sedentary controls and static athletes
    • Repolarization:
      • S-T segment elevation with peaked T waves, normalizes with exertion
      • S-T segment depression with depressed J points, rarely found in athletes
      • T-wave inversion in lateral leads associated with interventricular septal hypertrophy in static athletes (can be normal finding in dynamic athletes)
  • Chest radiography (2)[C]:
    • Heart is globular in appearance, particularly in endurance athletes.
    • Cardiomegaly (cardiothoracic ratio >0.50)
  • Echocardiography:
    • Biventricular hypertrophy
    • Left ventricular wall thickness >13 mm uncommon in highly trained athletes; values >15 mm indicative of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (3)
    • Dynamic athletes: Left and right ventricular dilation with left, right ventricular and septal hypertrophy (eccentric hypertrophy)
    • Static athletes: Left ventricular and septal hypertrophy with either decrease or no change in left ventricle chamber size (concentric hypertrophy); similar changes occur with chronic HTN (2)[B]
  • Cardiac magnetic resonance (1,3)[B]:
    • Precise assessment of chamber size, myocardial mass, systolic function
    • Capable of measuring both ventricles
    • Useful in differentiating athlete's heart from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC)

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Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Detraining leads to a decrease in wall thickness and a reversal of electrocardiographic abnormalities (2,3)[B]:
  • Reversal happens over several weeks.
    • Can be used to differentiate from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy if other methods are unrevealing
Differential Diagnosis
  • Hypertensive cardiac hypertrophy
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Dilated cardiomyopathy
  • ARVC
Ongoing Care
Follow-Up Recommendations
  • Many of the physiologic adaptations observed in athletic heart syndrome resolve when exercise is stopped.
  • Because the adaptations that occur in the resistive or static athlete are similar to those caused by chronic HTN, the long-term effects could be damaging. Therefore, these individuals should be encouraged to incorporate dynamic components to their weight-lifting routine.
  • Patients with overlapping features of athletic heart and a pathologic process (ie, exertional symptoms or family history) should be evaluated by a cardiologist prior to being allowed to return to sport or exercise.
References
1. La Gerche A, Taylor AJ, Prior DL. Athlete's heart: The potential for multimodality imaging to address the critical remaining questions. JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 2009;2:350–363.
2. Rich BS, Havens SA. The athletic heart syndrome. Curr Sports Med Rep. 2004;3:84–88.
3. Lauschke J, Maisch B. Athlete's heart or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy? Clin Res Cardiol. 2009;98:80–88.
Additional Reading
Pluim BM, et al. The athlete's heart. A meta-analysis of cardiac structure and function. Circulation. 2000;101:336–344.
Maron BJ. Sudden death in young athletes. New Engl J Med. 2003;349:1064–1075.
Codes
ICD9
429.3 Cardiomegaly


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