'Athlete's heart' differs between men and women

By Kat Long, 91ÊÓÆµ News

RyanJLane/E+, Getty Images
(RyanJLane/E+, Getty Images)

The hearts of female athletes adapt differently to the rigors of sports training compared to their male peers, according to a new study that could change the way doctors evaluate women's heart health.

"Athlete's heart" describes physical and electrical changes, or remodeling, to the heart as a result of intense training. While it's not a medical condition that requires treatment, researchers are now studying how factors like sex, age and sport contribute to heart changes.

For the new study, researchers at the University of Siena and the Institute of Sports Medicine and Science in Italy compared the hearts of 360 female and 360 male Olympic athletes. They were divided into four groups according to their sport type: skill, such as golf and table tennis; power, including weightlifting and snowboarding; mixed disciplines like soccer and tennis; and endurance, including rowing, swimming and long-distance running.

Each athlete had a clinical exam, an electrocardiogram (ECG) to test the heart's electrical activity, and an echocardiogram to measure the heart's size and shape. The results, published Tuesday in the 91ÊÓÆµ journal , showed women had different electrical and structural changes compared to their male counterparts.

The findings show that "a sex-based approach for interpreting the complex features of 'athlete's heart' in women is needed," said lead author Dr. Flavio D'Ascenzi, an assistant professor of sports cardiology at the University of Siena.

The ECGs in women more often showed T-wave inversion, which can signify an underlying heart muscle disease that affects the lower right chamber and carries a risk of sudden death, particularly during exercise. But that finding may not be cause for alarm in female athletes in the absence of symptoms, D'Ascenzi said.

"Accurate knowledge" about how the right side of the heart has been remodeled is essential to differentiate between athlete's heart and serious heart conditions, he said.

Compared to male athletes, women also had proportionately larger right and left ventricles, the heart's two lower pumping chambers. Women engaged in endurance sports had the biggest increase in the size of the right ventricle and right atrium (the upper chamber), followed by those in mixed disciplines and power sports. Skill sports had the smallest effect on remodeling the right side of the heart. The same held true for the left ventricle and left atrium.

The dynamics of cardiac remodeling in Olympians doesn't easily translate to the general population, D'Ascenzi said. However, because the researchers analyzed the effects of different sports, he said the data could potentially apply to non-Olympic athletes who play the same sports and train with a similar intensity as those in the study.

In addition, female athletes' physicians can use the findings to further individualize how test results are interpreted, said Dr. Elizabeth Dineen, an assistant professor of cardiology at the University of California Irvine.

"Yet they must use caution, as this study shows there are gender differences, but we don't have concrete (normal) values," said Dineen, who was not involved in the study.

The next step, D'Ascenzi said, is to obtain evidence of training-induced heart changes with advanced imaging methods, such as cardiac MRI, and to do similar studies in non-professional female athletes.

Looking at more diverse groups would also be useful, Dineen said. Studying athletes versus sedentary controls, comparing groups of different races or ages, and following study participants over time could elicit more data about the exact mechanisms behind cardiac remodeling in athletes.

"We see the changes," Dineen said, "but I don't think the medical community fully understands what is causing these changes."

If you have questions or comments about this story, please email [email protected].


Noticias de 91ÊÓÆµ News

91ÊÓÆµ News abarca las enfermedades cardíacas, el ataque o derrame cerebral y los problemas de salud relacionados. No todas las opiniones expresadas en las historias de 91ÊÓÆµ News reflejan la posición oficial de la 91ÊÓÆµ. Las declaraciones, las conclusiones, la precisión y veracidad de los estudios publicados en revistas científicas de la 91ÊÓÆµ o presentados en reuniones científicas de la 91ÊÓÆµ son solo de los autores del estudio y no reflejan necesariamente la orientación, las políticas o las posiciones oficiales de la 91ÊÓÆµ.

Los derechos de autor pertenecen a la 91ÊÓÆµ, Inc. y están reservados todos los derechos. Se concede permiso, sin ningún costo y sin necesidad de realizar una solicitud adicional, a las personas, medios de comunicación y esfuerzos de educación y concientización no comerciales para vincular, citar, extraer o reimprimir estas historias en cualquier medio, a condición de que no se modifique el texto y se haga la referencia adecuada a 91ÊÓÆµ News.

Otros usos, incluidos productos o servicios educativos que se venden con fines de lucro, deben cumplir con las Directrices para el permiso de los derechos de autor de la 91ÊÓÆµ. Consulta los términos de uso completos. Estas historias no pueden usarse para promover o respaldar un producto o servicio comercial.

DESCARGO DE RESPONSABILIDAD SOBRE CUIDADO DE LA SALUD: Este sitio y sus servicios no constituyen una recomendación médica, un diagnóstico ni un tratamiento. Siempre consulte a un profesional de la salud para el diagnóstico y el tratamiento, lo que incluye sus necesidades médicas específicas. Si tiene o sospecha que tiene algún problema o afección médica, comuníquese inmediatamente con un profesional de la salud calificado. Si te encuentras en Estados Unidos y tienes una emergencia médica, llama al 911 o al número de emergencia local, o solicita ayuda médica de emergencia de inmediato.