Title: Noninvasive Cardiovascular Evaluation of the Competitive Athlete
1Noninvasive Cardiovascular Evaluation of the
Competitive Athlete
- Gregory Piazza, M.D.
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
- March 19, 2008
2Death on the Soccer Field
- Antonio Puerta, a midfielder for Sevilla FC,
collapsed during a game on August 25, 2007. - He regained consciousness and was walked to the
locker room where he collapsed again. - He was resuscitated and brought to the ICU of a
nearby hospital. - He suffered multiple prolonged cardiac arrests
over the next several hours resulting in anoxic
brain injury and multisystem organ failure. - He died 3 days after his initial collapse at age
22. - Work-up revealed arrhythmogenic right ventricular
cardiomyopathy (ARVC).
Antonio Puerta (November 26, 1984 August 28,
2007)
http//soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id457723
cc5901
3Overview
- Although rare, sudden cardiac deaths (SCD) among
young competitive athletes have substantial
emotional and social impact upon the lay public
and medical community. - Because competitive athletes are often thought to
exemplify health and invulnerability, their
sudden deaths seem counterintuitive.
N Engl J Med 200334911
4Overview
- Even with widespread availability of portable
automated defibrillators at sporting events, the
mortality for athletes after syncope or cardiac
arrest remains high. - An improved understanding of conditions that
predispose to SCD among trained athletes has lead
to a great interest in pre-participation
screening.
N Engl J Med 200334911
5Objectives
- Describe the physiological adaptations of the
cardiovascular system to athletic training - Highlight the epidemiology and causes of SCD in
competitive athletes - Discuss the role of noninvasive testing in the
evaluation of competitive athletes - Review the recommendations for pre-participation
screening
6The Physiological Adaptations in the Trained
Athlete
- Athletic training for competitive endurance
(aerobic) or isometric (static or power) sports
results in characteristic changes in cardiac
structure and function. - This physiological form of left ventricular (LV)
hypertrophy is known as the athletes heart and
must be distinguished from pathological
conditions that may predispose to SCD. - Depending on the nature of the exercise training
benign increases in LV mass, wall thickness, and
cavity size as well as left atrial volume may be
observed in healthy athletes.
N Engl J Med 200334911
7The Physiological Adaptations in the Trained
Athlete
Endurance Training
Isometric Training
- Increase in LV cavity size
- Minimal increase in LV wall thickness
- Increase in LV wall thickness out of proportion
to increase in cavity size
Circulation 2000101336
8The Athletes Heart
Gray area of overlap between the athletes
heart and cardiomyopathies.
N Engl J Med 200334911
9The Athletes Heart
- The physiological changes of the athletes heart
have been evaluated by cardiac MRI and 3-D echo. - In a study of 30 patients, members of a mens
professional rowing team were compared with
sedentary untrained male subjects. - Each patient underwent evaluation with 3-D echo
and cardiac MRI. - While 2-D echo significantly underestimated
measurements, 3-D echo demonstrated good
agreement with cardiac MRI. - Compared with sedentary subjects, athletes had
significantly increased LVEDV, LVESV, and LV
mass. - There were no differences in LVEF or the ratio of
LV mass to LVEDV (LV remodeling index).
Heart 200692975
10The Athletes Heart
- In another study, 23 male and 20 female endurance
athletes were compared with age-matched controls
using cardiac MRI. - Male and female athletes demonstrated similar
increases in LV and RV volumes and mass indices
compared with controls. - No gender-specific differences in the effect of
training on LV and RV volumes, mass indices,
ejection fractions, and LV to RV ratios of volume
and mass indices were noted.
J Magn Reson Imaging 200624297
11Competitive Sports
Classification of sports based on peak static and
dynamic components achieved during competition.
uptodateonline.com
12Extrinsic Risk Factors for SCD
- The risk of SCD in competitive sports increases
with burst exertion (rapid acceleration and
deceleration common in basketball, tennis, and
soccer). - Extreme environmental conditions (temperature,
humidity, and altitude) that affect blood volume
and electrolyte balance also contribute to the
risk. - Progressive and systematic training to achieve
higher levels of conditioning and performance may
further increase the risk by resulting in a total
cardiovascular demand that often exceeds that of
competition.
Circulation 20041092807 J Am Coll Cardiol
2005451364
13Other Extrinsic Risk Factors for SCD
- Cocaine abuse
- Amphetamine abuse
- Performance enhancing drugs (anabolic steroids)
- Dietary and nutritional supplements (including
ephedra-containing products)
N Engl J Med 2001345351 J Am Coll Cardiol
2002391083
14Epidemiology of Sudden Cardiac Death
- Although likely underestimated, the incidence of
SCD among competitive athletes appears to be low,
ranging from 1 per 50,000 to 1 per 300,000. - In a study of Minnesota high school athletes, the
incidence of SCD was 1 in 200,000. - In a study of nearly 220,000 marathon runners,
SCD occurred in 4 individuals. - None had any prior cardiac symptoms
- 2 had competed in several previous marathons
- 3 had coronary disease on autopsy
JAMA 19962761999 J Am Coll Cardiol
1998321881 J Am Coll Cardiol 199628428
15Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death
- Causes of SCD in athletes vary by age and
geographic location. - Among young competitive athletes (lt 35 years old)
in the U.S., inherited or congenital heart
conditions (such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy)
are the most common etiologies. - Among masters athletes (gt 35 years old),
coronary artery disease (CAD) appears to be the
predominant cause of SCD.
J Am Coll Cardiol 200341974 Am J Cardiol
1980451292
16Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in Young Athletes
- In a U.S. registry of 236 young competitive
athletes with SCD and structural heart disease on
autopsy, the following conditions were reported - Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)(36)
- Anomalous coronary artery (13)
- Myocarditis (7)
- Ruptured aortic aneurysm (4)
- ARVC (4)
- Myocardial bridging (4)
- Aortic stenosis (3)
- CAD (3)
- Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (3)
- Mitral valve prolapse (MVP)(3)
J Am Coll Cardiol 200341974
17Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in Young Athletes
Distribution of causes of SCD in 1435 young
competitive athletes. From the Minneapolis Heart
Institute Foundation Registry, 1980 to 2005.
Circulation 20071151643
18Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in Young Athletes
- In an analysis of data from over 6 million U.S.
military recruits 35 years old, 64
exercise-related deaths were due to an
identifiable structural abnormality - Anomalous coronary artery (33)
- Myocarditis (20)
- CAD (16)
- HCM (13)
Ann Intern Med 2004141829
19Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in Young Athletes
- In contrast, a series of 49 young athletes with
SCD from Northern Italy demonstrated the
following distribution - ARVC (22)
- CAD (18)
- Anomalous coronary artery (12)
- MVP (10)
- Myocarditis (6)
- HCM (2)
N Engl J Med 1998339364
20Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
- Incidence is approximately 1 in 500.
- It is a heterogeneous genetic disorder resulting
in LV hypertrophy and fibrosis. - Sudden death is most likely due to reentrant
ventricular tachyarrhythmias. - Most patients have an abnormal ECG.
- May be diagnosed by echo and cardiac MRI.
Marked septal hypertrophy with SAM
Late gadolinium enhancement consistent with
myocardial fibrosis
JAMA 20022871308
21Anomalous Coronary Anatomy
- Incidence is likely underestimated.
- In SCD, most common anomaly is a left main
coronary artery originating from the right sinus
of Valsalva. - May be suggested by chest pain or syncope with
exercise but often SCD is the first symptom. - Mechanism of ischemia is likely kinking or
compression of the anomalous artery between the
aorta and pulmonary trunk. - ECG and echo are often normal.
- Best diagnosed by cardiac MRI, CT, or
catheterization.
Two patients with left main coronary arteries
originating from right sinus of Valsalva
J Am Coll Cardiol 2000351493
22Myocarditis
- May be preceded by a viral illness.
- Clinical findings may include chest pain and
heart failure symptoms in an otherwise healthy
young person. - ECG often demonstrates diffuse repolarization
changes. - SCD is likely due to ventricular arrhythmias or
atrioventricular conduction disease. - May be suggested by LV systolic dysfunction (as
detected by echo, cardiac MRI, or cath) in the
absence of CAD. - Cardiac MRI may demonstrate focally increased
T2-signal consistent with myocardial inflammation
and late gadolinium enhancement suggestive of
fibrosis.
Inferolateral and lateral hypokinesis in a young
patient with myocarditis
Late gadolinium enhancement of the inferolateral
and lateral wall in the same patient
23Aortic Aneurysm and Dissection
- In young athletes, aortic aneurysm and dissection
is most often associated with aortopathy. - Closely linked with inherited connective tissue
disorders (Marfans syndrome). - Marfans is inherited in an autosomal dominant
fashion with an incidence of 1 in 10,000 to
20,000. - Characteristic morphological findings
(arachnodactyly, hyperflexible joints) may be
noted on examination. - SCD occurs due to aortic aneurysm rupture or
dissection. - Diagnosed on basis of clinical criteria.
- Echo is recommended to evaluate for aortic
disease (including AR). - Cardiac MRI and CT also detect aortic pathology.
J Am Coll Cardiol 2005451340
24Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy
- Characterized by fibrofatty infiltration of the
RV free wall (may affect the LV). - Symptoms include exercise induced palpitations,
presyncope, or syncope. - SCD is due to catecholamine-sensitive ventricular
arrhythmias. - ECG findings include increased QRS duration,
epsilon waves in V1-2, and T wave inversions in
the right precordium. - Imaging may demonstrate RV dilatation and
aneurysms. - Echo and cardiac MRI are the most widely used
noninvasive tests for ARVC.
Epsilon waves
Increased signal on T1-weighted imaging in the RV
free wall (left) and decreased signal on fat
suppressed imaging (right)
J Am Coll Cardiol 2001381773
25Myocardial Bridging
- Myocardial bridging occurs when a portion of an
epicardial coronary artery tunnels into the
myocardium. - Systolic vessel compression and delayed diastolic
relaxation impair coronary blood flow in the
intramyocardial segment. - Although usually of little clinical consequence,
myocardial bridging may infrequently result in
exertional angina, infarction, and SCD. - Myocardial bridging may be diagnosed on cardiac
CT, MRI, or catheterization.
Contrast-enhanced EBCT image revealing an
intramyocardial segment of the LAD
N Engl J Med 20033491047
26Aortic Stenosis
- Aortic stenosis (AS) in young athletes is most
often due to congenital abnormalities of the
aortic valve. - Most common abnormality is a bicuspid aortic
valve. - More unusual etiologies include subvalvar and
supravalvar aortic stenoses. - Nearly all adult patients with SCD and congenital
AS experience preceding symptoms. - The majority of children may not have symptoms
before SCD. - Echo is the test of choice (although cardiac CT
or MRI may be required to assess for concomitant
aortic pathology).
Circulation 199387I16
27Premature Coronary Artery Disease
- CAD in young patients is frequently asymptomatic.
- Therefore, its incidence is likely
underestimated. - In an autopsy study, advanced coronary stenoses
were noted in 20 of men and 8 of women aged
30-34 years. - 19 and 8 of men and women aged 30-34 years,
respectively, had 40 stenosis of the LAD. - Coronary artery disease is the most common cause
of SCD among masters athletes (gt 35 years old).
Circulation 2000102374
28Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy
- Idiopathic cardiomyopathy is a relatively
uncommon cause of SCD in young competitive
athletes (3). - The mechanism of SCD is most often reentrant
ventricular tachyarrhythmia originating from
areas of abnormal myocardium. - Bradyarrhythmia or asystole may lead to SCD if
cardiomyopathic process involves the conduction
system.
Late gadolinium enhancement in a patient with
cardiomyopathy and normal coronary arteries
29Mitral Valve Prolapse
- Although its relationship to tachyarrhythmia has
been controversial, MVP is associated with an
increased risk of SCD. - However, the increased risk of SCD seems to
correlate with the degree of mitral valve
pathology and MR. - In one study, the annual SCD mortality was
significantly increased (from 0.9 to 1.9) in
patients with advanced mitral valve pathology
compared with patients with isolated MVP (no MR)
or the general population. - Late gadolinium enhancement of the papillary
muscles may be noted in some patients with MVP
suggesting the presence of scarring or fibrosis.
Late gadolinium enhancement of the anterolateral
papillary muscle in a patient with MVP
Am Heart J 19871131298
30Other Congenital Heart Disease
- In addition to arrhythmic causes, cyanosis during
exercise in the setting of adult congenital heart
disease with right-to-left shunt may lead to
syncope and SCD. - Cardiac arrest is an unusual first presentation
of adult congenital heart disease as most are
symptomatic and therefore diagnosed before SCD. - Adult congenital heart disease may be diagnosed
by echo, cardiac CT, or MRI. - Cardiac MRI currently offers the best definition
of the complex anatomy of repaired and unrepaired
congenital heart disease.
31Sudden Cardiac Death in the Absence of Structural
Heart Disease
- SCD in competitive athletes may also occur in the
absence of structural heart disease. - Causes of SCD in structurally normal hearts
include inherited arrhythmia syndromes such as - Long QT syndrome
- Brugada syndrome
- Catecholaminergic polymorphic VT
- Wolf-Parkinson-White syndrome
- Congenital short QT syndrome
- In addition, idiopathic VF and commotio cordis
may result in SCD among competitive athletes.
32Long QT Syndromes
- Often acquired, long QT syndrome can be
inherited. - Long QT syndromes may result in polymorphic VT
(torsade de pointes) and SCD. - Among inherited long QT syndromes, precipitants
and prognosis vary.
Examples of long QT syndromes
N Engl J Med 20081131298
33Brugada Syndrome
- Autosomal dominant disorder resulting in
increased risk of SCD. - Multiple mutations in the cardiac sodium channel
SCN5A have been described. - Characterized by RBBB and ST segment elevations
in V1-V3 on ECG.
Typical ECG pattern for Brugada Syndrome
uptodateonline.com
34Catecholaminergic Polymorphic VT
- Also known as familial polymorphic VT,
catecholaminergic polymorphic VT typically
manifests itself in childhood or adolescence. - SCD may occur in the setting of emotional or
physical stress. - Like LQT1, SCD while swimming has been described.
- Several mutations have been described including
in the cardiac ryanodine receptor and
calsequestrin 2 genes.
Circulation 200210669
35Wolf-Parkinson-White
- WPW syndrome has been associated with an
increased risk of SCD. - The mechanism of SCD is most often atrial
fibrillation or AVNRT that degenerates to VF. - In up to 25 of patients with SCD due to WPW,
pre-excitation and arrhythmias have been
previously undiagnosed.
Typical pre-excitation pattern for WPW
J Am Coll Cardiol 1991181711 uptodateonline.com
36Congenital Short QT Syndrome
- Congenital short QT syndrome is a rare autosomal
dominant disorder associated with SCD due to VF. - Multiple genetic abnormalities have been
described including gain-of-function mutations in
potassium channel genes. - Short QT is defined as a corrected QT interval
(QTc) 340 msec. - Patients often develop atrial fibrillation at a
young age . - Not all patients with short QTc carry an
increased risk of SCD.
Circulation 2003108965
37Idiopathic VF
- Also called primary electrical disease,
idiopathic VF is diagnosed when SCD occurs in a
structurally normal heart and other arrhythmic
disorders are excluded. - May account for up to 5 of SCD cases.
- Idiopathic VF is more common in men and has a
mean onset of 36 years. - A history of syncope precedes SCD in up to 25 of
patients.
Am Heart J 1990120661
38Commotio Cordis
- Commotio cordis describes SCD that occurs
following precordial trauma. - A registry analysis revealed that 62 of cases
occurred during organized or recreational
sporting activities (baseball, hockey). - In an animal model, low-energy impact to the
chest wall just before the peak of the T wave
produced VF, while impact during the QRS complex
produced complete heart block. - Frequency of VF was related to the hardness of
the projectile and velocity of impact. - In one series, only 16 of individuals survived
an arrhythmic event in the setting of commotio
cordis.
JAMA 20022871142 N Engl J Med 1998 3381805
39Commotio Cordis
Fatal commotio cordis in a 14-year-old boy during
a karate match.
N Engl J Med 200334911
40Syncope in Competitive Athletes
- Syncope in competitive athletes without known
structural heart disease is most often due to
neurocardiogenic, or vasovagal, mechanisms. - However, the diagnosis of neurocardiogenic
syncope in this patient population is a diagnosis
of exclusion. - Careful evaluation warrants a detailed history,
physical examination, and ECG. - Echocardiography, exercise treadmill testing,
cardiac MRI, and electrophysiological testing may
be required to exclude structural and
dysrhythmia-related causes of syncope.
41Cardiovascular Events in Spectators
- The emotional stress of watching competitive
sports may increase the risk of cardiovascular
events. - A recent study demonstrated an increased
incidence of cardiac emergencies among German men
and women on days that the German team was
playing a 2006 World Cup match compared to
non-match days (incidence ratio 2.66, 95 CI
2.33-3.04 plt0.001. - The incidence of STEMI, NSTEMI, and arrhythmia
increased by a factor of 2.5, 2.6, and 3.1,
respectively, during match days.
Daily cardiovascular events from May 1 to July 31
in 2003, 2005, and 2006. Numbers 1-7 correspond
to German soccer matches during the 2006 World
Cup (8 Final, Italy v. France).
N Engl J Med 2008358475
42Screening
- Due to the devastating nature of SCD and the
potential to prevent such deaths by diagnosing
associated disorders noninvasively, clinicians
have a strong incentive to screen athletes. - However, the following obstacles prevent
widespread screening with noninvasive testing - Large number of competitive athletes (8 million
in the U.S., including high school, collegiate,
professional) - Low prevalence of underlying congenital heart
disease - Number of disorders to consider, each with
different optimal testing modalities - Impact of false-positive studies (substantial
when screening for rare diseases possible
medicolegal implications) - No randomized trials evaluating the impact of
pre-participation screening on the incidence of
SCD
N Engl J Med 200334911
43Screening
- In an observational series from Italy, a
mandatory screening program including ECG was
associated with a decrease in the annual
incidence of SCD in athletes from 3.6 to 0.4 per
100,000 person-years from 1980 to 2004. - AHA guidelines differ from those of the European
Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) such that routine
noninvasive testing (including ECG) is not
recommended.
JAMA 20062961593 Circulation 20071151643
44AHA Screening Recommendations
- Younger competitive athletes (lt35)
- Complete personal/family history and physical
exam - Performed by physicians or certified
non-physicians - q2 years for high school and yearly for
college/pro - Masters athletes (gt35)
- Complete personal/family history and physical
exam - Exercise testing for moderate-to-high risk
patients (men gt40, women gt50 with one or more CAD
risk factors symptoms suggestive of CAD 65
regardless of risk factors/symptoms) - Recreational athletes
- No explicit AHA guidelines exercise testing
recommended in patients at high risk for CAD
Circulation 20071151643
4512-Element AHA Pre-Participation Screening
Recommendations
- Personal history (confirmed by parent if minor)
- Exertional chest discomfort
- Unexplained syncope/presyncope
- Excessive exertional fatigue/dyspnea
- Prior heart murmur
- Elevated blood pressure
- Family history (confirmed by parent if minor)
- Premature death due to heart disease before age
50 - Disability due to heart disease in relative lt50
- Specific knowledge of certain cardiac conditions
(HCM, other CM, ion channelopathy, Marfans,
arrhythmias) - Physical examination
- Cardiac exam (supine and standing)
- Femoral pulses
- Physical stigmata of Marfans
- Bilateral blood pressure readings
- Positive finding of any 1 element warrants
referral to cardiovascular specialist /- further
testing
Circulation 20071151643
46Activity Restriction Recommendations
- The 26th Bethesda Conference guidelines have
established clear recommendations for the
athletic eligibility and restriction of athletes
with conditions associated with SCD. - The decision to remove athletes from eligibility
may be associated with complex social and
medicolegal ramifications. - A U.S. appellate court has ruled that the
Bethesda Conference report can be used by
clinicians to determine an athletes eligibility. - Guidelines such as the Bethesda Conference report
have been endorsed as a means for resolving
medicolegal disputes involving the eligibility of
young athletes.
N Engl J Med 200334911
47Conclusions
- SCD in competitive athletes may result from a
variety of disorders that may be detected by
noninvasive testing. - Noninvasive testing must be interpreted carefully
in order to distinguish the physiological effects
of exercise training from pathology. - AHA guidelines do not endorse routine
pre-participation screening with noninvasive
testing. - However, noninvasive testing plays a critical
role in the evaluation of competitive athletes
with positive findings on screening history and
physical examination.