MRI Helps Identify Older Athletes At Risk For Heart Attack

December 1, 2006 – 11:28 am | posted in Cardiovascular, MRI / PET / Ultrasound, Seniors / Aging, Sports Medicine / Fitness

A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study of healthy marathon runners over age 50 showed that cardiovascular disease occurs among seemingly healthy endurance athletes and may be difficult to distinguish from the effects of training the heart muscle. The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).

“Radiologists can use MRI to identify cardiovascular disease that is not yet causing symptoms,” said Torleif A. Sandner, M.D., radiologist at University Hospital, Munich University in Germany.

The study, performed at University Hospital in Essen, Germany, involved 110 male volunteers between the ages of 50 and 72, all of whom had completed at least five marathons in the last three years. The endurance athletes had no current symptoms or known history of cardiovascular disease or diabetes.

The MRI scans revealed that, although cardiac chambers were not enlarged, left ventricular mass (LVM) in the marathon runners was significantly higher than in the general population. LVM is the weight of the muscle of the left ventricle, the main pumping chamber of the heart. The marathon runners had an average LVM weight of 141 grams compared to a normal weight of approximately 77.5 grams.

“The change in the heart mass is the way the body reacts to the endurance training,” Dr. Sandner said. “However, in some runners, it may also be an early sign of cardiac disease.”

“It is difficult to differentiate an athlete’s heart from one that has disease,” added Stefan Möhlenkamp, M.D., Ph.D., cardiologist and principal investigator of the study. “Establishing criteria for what is normal in marathon runners of advanced age is one of the team’s research goals.”

The number of older adults participating in marathon running has risen dramatically in the past decade. But according to Dr. Möhlenkamp, pre-training screening of new endurance athletes doesn’t typically account for problems specific to advanced-age runners.

“Conventional screening includes a blood pressure check, questions about heart disease in the family or chest pain, listening to the heart and lungs and possibly doing an echocardiogram,” he said. “But these techniques can miss early potentially life-threatening cardiovascular disease.”

“Exercise is the best thing anyone can do to prolong and improve the quality of life,” said Dr. Möhlenkamp. “As physicians, we need to determine how to safely declare an individual of advanced age fit for marathon running.”

Also Read

  • Depression And Heart Attacks
  • Cardiogenic Shock: A Heart Attack’s Deadly Counterpart
  • Research Lacking On Why Heart Disease Is More Deadly For Women
  • Losing Over 3cm In Height In Old Age Raises Heart Attack Risk
  • Heart Disease Risk In Older Men May Be Increased By PTSD
  • Love your heart: New NHLBI Resource Helps Women Reduce Heart Disease Risk
  • Disparities In Awareness Of Heart Attack Warning Signs Among Adults In 14 States Revealed By CDC Study
  • Ice-cold And In Great Shape: A Cold Kick To Jolt Athletes Into Action Despite The Heat
  • Doctors Aggressively Treat Early Heart Attacks, Research Shows
  • Cardiovascular Events Reduced By Low-Dose Aspirin
  • You must be logged in to post a comment.