Athlete's heart is a cardiac adaptation to long-term, intensive training, which includes changes as increased ventricular cavity diameters, wall thickness and mass, produced with a degree consistent with sports activities and exercise programs. The Doppler myocardial imaging (DMI) permits characterization of the velocities of each ventricular myocardial segment by placing the sample volume at the center of the cardiac muscle. Even if the standard two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography represents an irreplaceable method in the evaluation of cardiac adaptations to physical exercise, the data currently available suggests the usefulness of DMI in the assessment of the myocardial systolic and diastolic functions of the athlete's heart. In particular, an athlete's left ventricular hypertrophy is characterized by a "supernormal" DMI pattern, with increased myocardial early-diastolic velocity. Therefore, DMI analysis in the trained subject has demonstrated interesting prospective for: (1) the differential diagnosis from pathological, both, left and right ventricular hypertrophy; (2) the prediction of cardiac performance during physical effort; (3) the evaluation of the biventricular interaction; (4) the analysis of the myocardial adaptations to various training protocols; and (5) the early identification of specific genotypes associated with cardiomyopathies. On this ground, a combined use of standard 2D echo and DMI may be taken into account for a valid noninvasive and easy-repeatable evaluation of both physiological and pathological ventricular hypertrophies.
In Italy the existence of a law on health protection of competitive sports since 1982 has favored the creation and the revision of these cardiological guidelines (called COCIS), which have reached their fourth edition (1989-2009). The present article is the second English version, which has summarized the larger version in Italian. The experience of the experts consulted in the course of these past 20 years has facilitated the application and the compatibility of issues related to clinical cardiology to the sports medicine field. Such prolonged experience has allowed the clinical cardiologist to acquire knowledge of the applied physiology of exercise and, on the other hand, has improved the ability of sports physicians in cardiological diagnostics. All this work has produced these guidelines related to the judgment of eligibility for competitive sports in the individual clinical situations and in the different cardiovascular abnormalities and/or heart disease. Numerous arguments are debated, such as interpretation of the athlete's ECG, the utility of a preparticipation screening, arrhythmias, congenital heart disease, cardiomyopathies, arterial hypertension, ischemic heart disease and other particular issues.
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