Background-Recent efforts have focused on improving the specificity of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) criteria for ECG interpretation in athletes. These criteria are derived predominantly from white athletes (WAs) and do not account for the effect of Afro-Caribbean ethnicity or novel research questioning the relevance of several isolated ECG patterns. We assessed the impact of the ESC criteria, the newly published Seattle criteria, and a group of proposed refined criteria in a large cohort of black athletes (BAs)
A high proportion of young athletes exhibit conventional criteria for LVNC highlighting the non-specific nature of current diagnostic criteria if applied to elite athletic populations. Further assessment of such athletes should be confined to the small minority that demonstrate low indices of systolic function and marked repolarisation changes.
Background-Regular, intensive exercise results in physiological biventricular cardiac adaptation. Ethnicity is an established determinant of left ventricular remodeling; black athletes (BAs) exhibit more profound LV hypertrophy than white athletes (WAs). Right ventricular (RV) remodeling has not been characterized in BAs, although the issue is pertinent because BAs commonly exhibit ECG anomalies that resemble arrhythmogenic RV cardiomyopathy. Methods and Results-Between 2006 and 2012, 300 consecutive BAs (n=243 males) from 25 sporting disciplines were evaluated by use of ECG and echocardiography. Results were compared with 375 WAs and 153 sedentary control subjects (n=69 blacks). There were no ethnic differences between RV parameters in control subjects. Both BAs and WAs exhibited greater RV dimensions than control subjects. RV dimensions were marginally smaller in BAs than in WAs (proximal outflow tract, 30.9±5.5 versus 32.8±5.3 mm, P<0.001; longitudinal dimension, 86.6±9.5 versus 89.8±9.6 mm, P<0.001), although only 2.3% of variation was attributable to ethnicity. RV enlargement compatible with diagnostic criteria for arrhythmogenic RV cardiomyopathy was frequently observed (proximal outflow tract ≥32 mm; 45.0% of BAs, 58.5% of WAs). Anterior T-wave inversion was present in 14.3% of BAs versus 3.7% of WAs (P<0.001). Marked RV enlargement with concomitant anterior T-wave inversion was observed in 3.0% of BAs versus 0.3% of WAs (P=0.005). Further investigation did not diagnose arrhythmogenic RV cardiomyopathy in any athlete. Conclusions-Physiological RV enlargement is commonly observed in both black and white athletes. The impact of ethnicity is minimal, which obviates the need for race-specific RV reference values. However, in the context of frequent ECG repolarization anomalies in BAs, the potential for erroneous diagnosis of arrhythmogenic RV cardiomyopathy is considerably greater in this ethnic group. (Circulation. 2013;127:1783-1792.)Key Words: cardiomyopathy ◼ echocardiography ◼ electrocardiographic screening ◼ ethnicity ◼ exercise © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc.Circulation is available at http://circ.ahajournals.org DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.112.000270Continuing medical education (CME) credit is available for this article. Go to http://cme.ahajournals.org to take the quiz. Received December 6, 2012; accepted March 4, 2013. From St. George's University of London, London, United Kingdom (A.Z., S. Ghani, R.S., N.S., S. Gati, M.P., S.S.); University Hospital Lewisham, London, United Kingdom (A.Z., S. Ghani, N.S., S. Gati, S.S.); Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom (D.O.); and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom (V.F.P. [WAs]). 10,11 The influence of ethnicity on athletic RV remodeling has never been characterized, even though healthy BAs frequently reveal ECG repolarization anomalies that resemble those observed in ARVC.12 Furthermore, BAs comprise a growing number of elite sports participants worldwide, and for reasons that remain incompletely under...
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