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Cardiac Cases

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Hx of awakening to go to bathroom at 4 AM before twin cities ... Mont, European Heart Journal (2002) 23, 477 482. Onset in athletes is younger mean 52 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cardiac Cases


1
Cardiac Cases
  • Karl B. Fields, MD
  • Chief of Family Medicine Program
  • Director of Sports Medicine Fellowship
  • Moses Cone Hospital, Greensboro, NC
  • 2007 Ironman

2
GR 46 yo Marathon Runner
  • Hx of awakening to go to bathroom at 4 AM before
    twin cities marathon, blacked out and bumped
    his head on floor
  • Felt fine as soon as he awakened
  • Ran marathon without problems
  • History of feeling light-headed when swallowing
    bagel

3
GR- Resting
4
GR - Holter
5
GR - Holter
6
GR - Holter
7
GR - ETT
8
GR- ETT Stage 7 Bruce
9
Marathoners are Different!!
  • 8 year follow-up shows no syncope or heart
    related problems
  • Avoids foods difficult to swallow
  • Trains 150 miles per week on bike and runs 20 to
    30 miles per week
  • ETT still reaches 7 Stages on Bruce protocol
  • ECHO normal with high EF

10
V Tach in Marathon Runners
  • 355 competitive athletes with PVCs on holter
  • (gt or 3 PVCs)
  • Group A gt 2000 PVCs per 24 hrs
  • 21 of 71 athletes had cardiac abnormalities
  • Group B gt 100 but lt 2000 PVCs per 24 hrs
  • 5 of 153 had cardiac abnormalities
  • Group C lt 100 PVCs in 24 hrs
  • 0 of 131 had cardiac abnormalities
  • 1 athlete in Group A ultimately had a cardiac
    event
  • Biffi, et al., JACC 2002

11
Sinus Node Dysfunction in Athletes
  • Bradycardia well known and vagotonia but
    increasing evidence of intrinsic SA and AV node
    changes
  • Sinus arrhymia and wandering atrial pacemaker
    should be seen as normal response to vagal
    stimulation
  • Wenckebach with pauses as long as 2.4 secs common
    in athletes
  • SA block with longest pauses of 3.1 secs
  • No cases of 3rd degree block
  • Bjornstad H Storstein L Meen HD Hals O
    Cardiology 199484(1)42-50.

12
Congenital or Narrow Complex 3rd Degree Heart
Block
  • May represent an interruption of conduction
    between atrium and AV node in absence of other
    structural disease
  • Narrow complex 3rd degree block even if acquired
    may be less serious
  • Evaluation with ETT, 24 hour monitor and ECHO
  • Close follow-up rather than pacemaker

13
36th Bethesda Conference 2005
  • Athletes with a structurally normal heart and
    normal cardiac function, with no history of
    syncope or near syncope, a narrow QRS complex,
    ventricular rates at rest gt40 to 50 beats/min
    increasing appropriately with exertion, no or
    only occasional premature ventricular complexes,
    and no VT during exertion can participate in all
    competitive sports.
  • Zipes, DP, Ackerman, MJ, Estes NA, 3rd, et al.
    Task Force 7 arrhythmias. J Am Coll Cardiol
    2005 451354.

14
Is Endurance Training a Risk Factor for Atrial
Fibrillation
  • Observation of increased number of cases in
    middle-aged endurance athletes
  • Case Control study of men age 35 to 59
  • Vigorous orienteers had increase risk of atrial
    fibrillation RR of 5.5
  • However, much lower risk of mortality 1.7 vs
    8.5 and of CAD 2.7 vs 7.5
  • Karjalainen, et al. BMJ 19983161784-1785
    (13 June) 

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Is This a Serious Complication of Training?
  • Study of 30 athletes with atrial fibrillation
    followed 9 years
  • 15 stable, 7 resolved, 5 chronic atrial
    fibrillation, 3 died
  • Hoogsteen,Europace 2004 6(3)222-228
  • Case series of lone atrial fibrillation showed
    athletes represented 63 vs. 15 of population
  • Mont, European Heart Journal (2002) 23, 477482
  • Onset in athletes is younger mean 52
  • Risk is not present in physically active workers

17
KL 53 Year Old Physician and Former Elite
Marathoner
  • Saturday night you return from a play and the
    message on your answering machine from your
    running partner says, Come over as quick as you
    can, I feel dizzy, nauseated and my pulse is only
    23.
  • Runner for 40 years with marathon best of 218
  • Syncope with micturition on and off for years
    with resting HR often about 32
  • Symptoms of palpitations evaluated with normal
    ETT and EF gt 60 in prior years

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21
Follow-up KL 2004
  • Carotid massage leads to HR of 14
  • Cath shows large CA with no obstruction
  • Mild LVH with high EF
  • Pacemaker installed and felt better once rate
    adjusted to 50
  • All symptoms absent at 2 weeks and starting to
    run again

22
RD 48 Year Old Runner
  • C/O SOB with running primarily noted after eating
    too soon before a run
  • Extreme fatigue at 14 miles into his 18 mile run
    during marathon preparation
  • Runs 2000 miles per year/ 20 years of running
  • History of severe reflux and allergic rhinitis
  • No risk factors except marital stress

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31
Cardiac Referral RD
  • Cath shows severe right CAD
  • Stented June 2000
  • Focal lesions in proximal diagonal and distal LAD
    undergo PTCA in July 2000
  • January 2001 exercised to Bruce stage 5 with EF
    59 and mild inferior ischemic change on thallium
  • Normal stress cardiolyte in November 2001 before
    marathon in December 2001

32
Cardiac Referral 2 RD
  • Normal Stress cardiolyte March 2002
  • Epigastric pain August 2002 feels different GI
    referral Reflux
  • September 2002 felt bad for 3 weeks and chest
    pain with running/ fast walking
  • Cholesterol, BP all risk factors well controlled
  • Cath shows severe triple vessel disease

33
Follow-up - RD
  • Sept. 18, 2002 undergoes quadruple bypass with
    atrial fibrillation in post-op phase
  • Nov. 29, 2002 now about 10 weeks post op
    exercises to stage 5 Bruce protocol
  • April 27, 2004 seen for tibial stress fracture
    while training for marathon

34
Which Athletes Do You Stress Test?
  • Young symptomatic athletes particularly those
    with symptoms during exercise.
  • Previously sedentary adults who want to begin a
    fitness program, particularly if risk factors are
    present
  • Periodic testing for adult athletes engaged in
    vigorous sport men age 40 and women age 50
  • All adult athletes over 40 with symptoms that may
    be a CV equivalent
  • All adults athletes over 40 with a know CVD
    or equivalent

35
Pearls Regarding Athletes and ETT
  • Fitness assessment relative to age and activity
    is best predictor of cardiac outcomes for men and
    women
  • Failure to obtain high fitness levels in an
    endurance athlete is worrisome
  • HR recovery after exercise is better predictor of
    CAD than the EKG or imaging tests we use
  • Stress imaging offers minimal advantages vs.
    standard ETT except in special populations

36
Pearls Regarding Exercising Adults and ETT
  • Each 1 MET increase confers a 12 increase in
    survival
  • No interaction from use of beta blockers and
    predictability of exercise capacity
  • Absolute peak exercise capacity is a better
    predictor than age-adjusted

37
7 Year Survival Norm vs. CVD
  • Support low risk status for individuals with
  • gt 8 METS and High risk in those lt 5 METS

38
Women, Fitness, HRR and Cardiac Risk
  • 2994 women with Max ETT tested between 1972 and
    1976 in LRCC.
  • 20 yr follow-up in 1995
  • Women below median for exercise capacity
    (fitness) and HRR had a 3.5x increased risk of
    cardiac death
  • ST segment depression did not predict CV death
    risk
  • Mora, et al. Jama, 2003.

39
Clinical vs. Technical Assessment of CVD risk
  • EKG changes of ST segment depression and
    perfusion defects on scans are only moderately
    strong predictors of disease
  • Technology while useful is often misleading
  • Fitness level and HR recovery are strong
    predictors of cardiac outcomes and disease
  • Clinical variables such as resting HR, Max HR,
    Max systolic BP also help predict CAD
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