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You are here: Home > Ills & Conditions > Athletic Heart Syndrome


Athletic Heart Syndrome 


Related topics:
•  Heart Health Center
Chris Woolston
CONSUMER HEALTH INTERACTIVE

Below:
 • What is athletic heart syndrome?
 • Why isn't athletic heart syndrome dangerous?
 • How is athletic heart syndrome treated?


What is athletic heart syndrome?

The first thing you should know is that athletic heart syndrome isn't necessarily bad for you -- if you're an athlete. And it's not what makes young athletes expire in midcourt.

Like any other muscle, the heart gets stronger with exercise. Endurance exercises such as jogging, swimming, and cycling can make the organ bigger, allowing it to pump more blood with every beat. Short, intense workouts such as weight lifting further increase the pumping power by thickening the walls of the heart.

Just as body builders sculpt their abs and biceps into highly unusual shapes, many hard-core, competitive athletes develop extraordinary hearts. Not only is the heart extra large and thick, it also may produce some irregular rhythms (arrhythmia). A person with athletic heart syndrome may also have a markedly slow resting heart rate, in the range of 35 to 50 beats a minute. In addition, electrical impulses can take strange routes across the heart, causing abnormal readings on an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG). Together, these changes produced by exercise are called athletic heart syndrome.

Why isn't athletic heart syndrome dangerous?

An enlarged heart, arrhythmia, and unusual ECG readings would all be signs of serious trouble for the average person. In fact, the rhythms and ECG readings associated with athletic heart syndrome often mimic life-threatening disorders. But athletic heart syndrome itself is harmless. The "abnormal" changes in the athlete's heart are actually a testament to the body's ability to adapt.

If an athlete has symptoms of chest pain, reports irregular beats, or has passed out, he or she should probably get a medical exam to pinpoint the problem. Your doctor may want to run extra tests to determine whether the symptoms are a normal sign of your body's ability to adapt to training, or whether there's some abnormality in your heart. These tests may include an electrocardiogram, sonogram (a picture of the heart using sound waves), or another type of test.

Of course, some athletes really do have heart trouble. Occasionally, seemingly healthy young basketball or football players drop dead in the middle of a game or a practice. In almost every case, doctors trace the death to an unsuspected condition, such as congenital heart disease, but one that has nothing to do with athletic heart syndrome.

How is athletic heart syndrome treated?

Since athletic heart syndrome is harmless, there's no reason to treat it. If you really want a "normal" heart again, all you have to do is stop exercising. Soon, your heart, along with the rest of your body, will sag back into its former shape. But why not keep everything extra strong and healthy for a while? You should be proud of your athletic body, heart included.

-- Chris Woolston, M.S., is a health and medical writer with a master's degree in biology. He is a contributing editor at Consumer Health Interactive, and was the staff writer at Hippocrates, a magazine for physicians. He has also covered science issues for Time Inc. Health, WebMD, and the Chronicle of Higher Education. His reporting on occupational health earned him an award from the northern California Society of Professional Journalists.



References


Bryan, Greg et al. Athletic Heart Syndrome. Medical Problems. Vol.11, Number 2. April 1992, pp. 259-267.

Drezner, Jonathan A. Sudden cardiac death in young athletes. Postgraduate Medicine, October 2000.

O'Conner, Francis G., et al. Sudden death in young athletes: screening for the needle in a haystack. American Family Physician, June 1998.



Reviewed by Charles E. McLaughlin, a professor of sports medicine at the University of California at Berkeley.


Our reviewers are members of Consumer Health Interactive's medical advisory board.
To learn more about our writers and editors, click here.

First published May 18, 2001
Last updated June 24, 2008
Copyright © 2001 Consumer Health Interactive


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