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Magnetic Resonance Technique in the Assessment of Exercise-induced Long- and Short-Term Changes in Cardiac Function and Morphology

I

Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern

Status

Completed

Conditions

Myocardial Ischemia
Ventricular Remodeling
Myocardial Infarction
Ventricular Hypertrophy
Myocardial Contraction

Treatments

Other: Other
Other: repeated long term endurance exercise

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01305304
KEK 005/010 B

Details and patient eligibility

About

Until now it has been assumed that regular endurance training has a positive influence on cardiac function and that the positive effect increases with increasing intensity. However, little is known about the effects of intense endurance stress on the heart. According to current knowledge repeated exposure to strenuous endurance activity may lead to minor but possibly irreversible damage to the heart with resultant scarring of the heart's muscle.

Within this study the investigators attempt to find out by different analytical methods - in particular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasound of the heart - to what extent the heart muscle is affected by long term intense endurance exercise and which changes in cardiac function and morphology can possibly be found. Therefore the investigators compare former national competitive endurance athletes with sedentary controls.

Full description

Background

Despite the well documented cardio-protective effects of aerobic exercise of moderate intensity, short- and long-term consequences of strenuous exercise are less clear. There is increasing evidence that maintaining a high cardiac workload over a prolonged duration may result in transient impairment of cardiac function. Recent studies have also reported a transient increase in cardiac biomarkers after prolonged strenuous exercise. While in patients with cardiac disease the presence of cardiac dysfunction and increased cardiac biomarkers generally reflects myocardial damage, the impact of these observations in athletes is ill defined. It is a matter of concern whether in athletes such findings simply reflect a reversible response or whether repetitive events may lead to an accumulative cardiac damage. Traditional echocardiographic methods used to determine potential cardiac changes in morphology or function are investigator-dependent and may be subject to interference by cardiac pre- and afterload. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging provides an investigator-independent and objective method to quantify cardiac dimensions and function. Delayed contrast enhancement MR imaging is a highly reproducible cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging technique to directly visualize myocardial edema, necrosis and fibrosis.

Objective

To use cardiac and delayed contrast enhancement magnetic resonance imaging in combination with echocardiographic methods to to assess whether athletes involved in prolonged strenuous exercise over years reveal persistent alterations of cardiac morphology and function.

Methods

Cardiac and delayed contrast enhancement magnetic resonance imaging will be used in combination with echocardiographic methods to investigate whether involvement in prolonged strenuous exercise over years leads to changes in cardiac function and morphology. Therefore we study and compare 15 veteran elite athletes and 15 sedentary controls. The use of cardiac MRI and delayed contrast enhancement magnetic resonance imaging techniques will be paralleled by echocardiographic and tissue Doppler measurements to allow comparative analyses of the two methods.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

40 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age 40-65y
  • Healthy
  • history of national competitive endurance running (cases)
  • no history of endurance running (controls)

Exclusion Criteria

  • Contraindication for MRI
  • History of relevant cardiac disease (including cardiomyopathies)
  • coronary heart disease
  • coronary abnormalities
  • cardiovascular risk factors
  • History of any chronic disease
  • drug abuse
  • Arrhythmias which make adequate echocardiography unfeasible (such as atrial fibrillation or bundle-branch blocks)

Trial design

30 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Description:
15 healthy male "veteran" runners (marathon, triathlon, orienteering) aged between 40 and 65 years with a history of competitive running at a national level during a period of at least 5 years, implicating normally a runner career with at least 50km per week over more than 10 years
Treatment:
Other: repeated long term endurance exercise
2
Description:
15 healthy male volunteers, matched for age and bmi, without a history of competitive physical exercise (i.e. sedentary controls)
Treatment:
Other: Other

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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