Cardiff School of Sport and Health Sciences, Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff, UK.
School of Life and Medical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire, Hertfordshire, UK.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2020 May;20(4):553-562. doi: 10.1080/17461391.2019.1641556. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
: Clinical electrocardiographic (ECG) guidelines for athlete's heart are based upon cross-sectional data. We aimed to longitudinally evaluate the influence of endurance training on the ECG and compare the prevalence of ECG abnormalities defined by contemporary criteria. : A group of 66 training-naïve individuals completed a six-month training programme with resting ECGs and cardiopulmonary exercise tests performed at baseline, two and six months. Data were analysed using repeated measures analysis of variance and the prevalence of ECG abnormalities compared between proposed criteria. Maximal oxygen consumption increased from 45.4 ± 7.1 to 50.3 ± 7.1 ml·kg·min (0.05) pre-to-post training. ECG changes included, bradycardia (60 ± 12 vs. 53 ± 8 beats·min; 0.05), shorter P wave duration (106 ± 10 vs. 103 ± 11 ms; 0.05), reduced QTc (413 ± 27 vs. 405 ± 22 ms; 0.05), and increased left ventricular Sokolow-Lyon index (2.45 ± 0.66 vs. 2.62 ± 0.78 mV; 0.05). 85% of individuals showed ≥1 'training-related' ECG finding at six months vs. 68% at baseline. Using the 2013 Seattle Criteria, 4 ECGs were 'abnormal' at baseline and 3 at month six vs. 2 at baseline and 1 at month six, using the 2017 International Consensus. Prevalence of 'borderline' findings did not increase with training (11% at baseline and six months). : Six-months endurance training leads to a greater prevalence of 'training-related' but not 'borderline' or 'training-unrelated' ECGs. 'Borderline findings' may not necessarily represent training-related cardiac remodelling in novice athletes following a six-month training intervention. This study aimed to assess the longitudinal ECG changes following six months of endurance training, in training-naïve individuals, and whether these ECG changes support the revisions made to the recent 2017 international consensus criteria. The prevalence of 'training-related' findings were increased with six months of endurance training, however the prevalence of the revised 'borderline' criteria, according to the 2017 international consensus, did not increase and the associated quantitative ECG data (e.g. P-wave amplitude, QRS axis and QRS duration) remained unchanged. Further clinical consideration may be warranted for individuals within the early phase of exercise engagement presenting with 'borderline' ECG abnormalities, defined by the International criteria.
运动员心脏的临床心电图(ECG)指南基于横断面数据。我们旨在纵向评估耐力训练对 ECG 的影响,并比较当前标准定义的 ECG 异常的患病率。
一组 66 名未经训练的个体完成了为期六个月的训练计划,在基线、两个月和六个月时进行静息 ECG 和心肺运动测试。使用重复测量方差分析对数据进行分析,并比较提出的标准之间 ECG 异常的患病率。
最大摄氧量从训练前的 45.4±7.1 增加到训练后的 50.3±7.1ml·kg·min(0.05)。心电图变化包括心动过缓(60±12 次/分比 53±8 次/分;0.05)、P 波持续时间缩短(106±10 毫秒比 103±11 毫秒;0.05)、QTc 缩短(413±27 毫秒比 405±22 毫秒;0.05)和左心室 Sokolow-Lyon 指数增加(2.45±0.66 比 2.62±0.78mV;0.05)。85%的个体在六个月时显示≥1 项“与训练相关”的心电图发现,而基线时为 68%。使用 2013 年西雅图标准,基线时有 4 份心电图“异常”,而第六个月时有 3 份,使用 2017 年国际共识,基线时有 2 份,第六个月时有 1 份。随着训练,“边界”发现的患病率并没有增加(基线时为 11%,第六个月时为 11%)。
六个月的耐力训练导致更多的“与训练相关”,而不是“边界”或“与训练无关”的心电图异常。在六个月的训练干预后,“边界”发现可能不一定代表新手运动员的与训练相关的心脏重塑。
本研究旨在评估训练-naive 个体在六个月的耐力训练后心电图的纵向变化,以及这些心电图变化是否支持最近的 2017 年国际共识标准的修订。随着六个月的耐力训练,“与训练相关”的发现的患病率增加,但是,根据 2017 年国际共识修订的“边界”标准的患病率并没有增加,相关的定量心电图数据(例如 P 波振幅、QRS 轴和 QRS 持续时间)保持不变。对于在运动参与早期阶段出现“边界”心电图异常的个体,可能需要进一步的临床考虑,这些异常是根据国际标准定义的。