Sport-specific cardiac adaptation in 104 female elite athletes: MRI findings from the ELITE cohort

J. Van Hattum, M. A. Van Diepen, S. M. Verwijs, J. J. N. Daems, S. M. Boekholdt,A. Van Randen, R. N. Planken,M. Groenink,A. J. Nederveen,M. H. Moen, A. A. M. Wilde, Y. M. Pinto, H. T. Jorstad

European Heart Journal(2023)

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摘要
Abstract Background The overlap between exercise-induced cardiac remodelling (EICR) and cardiac pathology is a key challenge in sports cardiology. Mainly based on findings in male athletes, EICR is thought to be sport-specific, and varyingly characterised by increased ventricular volumes, cardiac mass and/or wall thickness. However, no large cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) study in female elite athletes has extensively examined sport-specific cardiac adaptations. Purpose To investigate sport-specific EICR on CMR in a large cohort of female elite athletes. Methods We performed a cross-sectional CMR analysis in female elite athletes (Para-/Olympic or professional athletes competing ≥10 hours per week at a national/international level) aged ≥16 years, included in the ELITE cohort (1). We excluded athletes with known cardiovascular disease, and classified athletes according to the ESC sports disciplines classification. Our outcomes of interest were sport-specific EICR, defined as BSA-indexed LV and RV end-diastolic volume (EDVi), LV wall mass (LVMi), and maximal LV wall thickness (LVWdmax), LV remodelling index (LVMi/LVEDVi), and LV/RV ratio (LVEDi/RVEDVi). CMR was performed according to a uniform protocol, preferentially on 1.5T. A dedicated core-lab analysed all CMRs in Circle Cardiovascular Imaging. Results We included 104 female elite athletes, 96% Caucasian, mean age of 26.1 ±5 years, BSA 1.8 ±0.1 m2, and mean professional (≥10 hours/week) athlete years of 11.6 ±5. The athletes were classified as skill (n=8), power (n=9), mixed (n=39) and endurance (n=48) sports. Endurance athletes had markedly increased left- and right ventricular volumes compared to power (LVEDVi 111.2 ±15 vs 98.7 ±11 ml/m2, p=0.009; RVEDVi 114.8 ±18 vs 101.7 ±10 ml/m2, p=0.006) and mixed athletes (LVEDVi 111.2 ±15 vs 107.3 ±13 ml/m2, p=0.058; RVEDVi 114.8 ±18 vs 107.8 ±12 ml/m2, p=0.031) (Figure 1). No differences were found between endurance, mixed, power and skill athletes in LVEDVi/RVEDVi ratios (0.97 vs 0.99 vs 0.97 vs 0.99), LVMi (52.6 ±12 vs 46.9 ±10 vs 48.7 ±10 vs 50.4 ±11 g/m2) (Figure 2), LVWdmax (8.1 ±1 vs 7.9 ±1 vs 7.9 ±1 vs 8.9 ±1 mm), LV remodelling index (LVMi/LVEDVi 0.47 vs 0.44 vs 0.49 vs 0.48), LV ejection fraction (56.3 ±4 vs 56.7 ±5 vs 58.2 ±3 vs 57.7 ±3 %), and RV ejection fraction (54.6 ±4 vs 55.7 ±4 vs 55.4 ±3 vs 56.7 ±4). Conclusion In female elite athletes, EICR according to sport categories is mainly characterised by balanced increases in ventricular volumes in endurance athletes, but not in increases in left ventricular wall-mass and thickness, even in sport categories with high static demands. Our findings constitute a first step towards the understanding of sport-specific EICR in female elite athletes.Figure 1.Figure 2.
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female elite athletes,elite athletes,cardiac,sport-specific
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