Autonomic regulation in elite athletes described with HRV is significantly different than in healthy controls. Sports modality and level of performance, but not age- or sex-influenced HRV. Our study provides athletic normal HRV values. Further investigations are needed to determine its role in risk stratification, optimization of training, or identifying overtraining.
Bevezetés: Az egyes európai országokban a prevenciós tevékenységnek köszönhető morbiditáscsökkenést Magyarországon még nem sikerült elérni. A hatékony prevenció alapfeltétele a lakosság egészségi állapotának, a kockázati tényezők jelenlétének pontos ismerete. Célkitűzés: A szerzők célja volt, hogy egy közép-magyarországi longitudinális lakossági vizsgálattal információt nyerjenek a magyar lakosság egészségi állapotáról, cardiovascularis kockázati státu-sáról, ami lehetővé teszi új rizikóbecslést befolyásoló tényezők azonosítását. Módszer: A Budakalász Vizsgálat a felnőtt lakosságot célzó (>20 év, ~8000 fő), átfogó, önkéntes alapú cardiovascularis szűrőprogram, amely egészségkérdőív-ből, noninvazív tesztekből (antropometriai mérések, szívultrahang, carotisultrahang, vérnyomásmérés, boka-kar index mérése), illetve vénás vérvételből és laborvizsgálatokból áll. Eredmények: 2014. januárig 2420 fő (a lakosság 30%-a, 41,2% férfi , átlagéletkor 54,8 év) kérdőíves, fi zikális vizsgálata és cardiovascularis kockázatbecslése történt meg. A résztvevők cardiovascularis morbiditása a korábbi országos felméréshez viszonyítva magasabb volt, illetve a cardiovascularis kockázati faktorok száma és a becsült 10 éves kockázat is emelkedettnek bizonyult a lakosok körében. Következtetések: Az eredmények felhívják a fi gyelmet a szűrések és a hatékony terápia fontosságára. Orv. Hetil., 2014, 155(34), 1344-1352. Kulcsszavak: cardiovascularis, morbiditás, kockázatbecslés, szűrővizsgálat Cardiovascular screening programme in the Central Hungarian region The Budakalász StudyIntroduction: The reduction in mortality due to prevention programmes observed in some European countries is not currently reached in Hungary. Effective prevention is based on the screening of risk factors and health state of the population. Aim: The goal of this study was to develop a longitudinal, population-based screening programme in the Central Hungarian region in order to collect information on the health state and cardiovascular risk profi le of the citizens and discover new potential cardiovascular risk factors. Method: The Budakalász Study is a self-voluntary programme involving the adult population (>20 yrs, approx. 8000 persons), and it consists of questionnaires, noninvasive tests (anthropometry, cardiac echo, carotid duplex scan, blood pressure measurement, ankle-brachial index), venous blood sample collection and laboratory tests. Results: Until January, 2014, 2420 persons (30% of the population, male: 41.2%, average age 54.8 years) participated in the programme. Cardiovascular morbidity was higher in contrast to a former national survey. The number of risk factors and, therefore, 10-year cardiovascular risk were also elevated in this population. Conclusions: These fi ndings underline the importance of screening programmes and effective therapies.
In Hungary, ECG is a keystone of routine athletic screening. Its significance is based on simplicity, quickness and high informative value as well as the fact that appearance of pathological ECG signs can precede the formation of structural heart diseases. During screening of healthy athletes, we studied the incidence of athletic ECG changes and pathological ECG abnormalities. Methods: We performed detailed analysis of 12-lead ECG recordings of asymptomatic elite, non-elite and master athletes and controls. Results: 227 athletes (male: 180, age: 27.2±8.7 years) and 89 controls (male: 57, age: 28.1±6.8 years) were examined. Benign ECG signs: sinus bradycardia, early repolarization and isolated Voltage criteria of left ventricular hypertrophy were common and more often in athletes compared to controls. Potentially pathological ECG signs: ST-(6.6% vs. 1.1%, p < 0.05) and T-wave (15.0% vs. 5.6%, p < 0.05) changes and signs of pathological left ventricular hypertrophy (5.3% vs. 0%, p < 0.05) occurred more frequently in athletes compared to controls. Conclusions: Signs of pathological left ventricular hypertrophy and repolarization abnormalities are more often in athletes. No structural heart disease could be verified in the background of the disorders. However, athletes having pathological ECG should be kept under tight cardiology control. Exact definition and widespread knowledge of pathological ECG changes is essential in early recognition of high risk athletes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.