A quantitative echocardiographic study of champion childhood swimmers.
- 1 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 55 (1), 142-145
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.55.1.142
Abstract
An echocardiographic evaluation of 77 members of a championship childhood swim team showed dimensional variations from normal in most athletes. Cardiac walls were thicker than the 95th percentile of normal: right ventricular anterior wall exceeded the 95th percentile in 100%, interventricular septum in 83% and left ventricular posterior wall in 91%. The left ventricular and left atrial cavities in diastole had mean values at the 50th percentile of normal but showed considerable scatter. The left ventricular cavity in systole had a mean value less than the 5th percentile of normal and also showed wide scatter. The aortic root and the aortic intercusp dimension exceeded the 95th percentile of normal in most subjects, 74% and 77%, respectively. No correlation existed between the coach's estimate of championship ability and echocardiographic wall or chamber sizes. Children who participate extensively in athletic training programs such as swimming may have echocardiograms which are quantitatively different from those of nonathletic younsters.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Noninvasive evaluation of ventricular hypertrophy in professional athletes.Circulation, 1976
- Comparative Left Ventricular Dimensions in Trained AthletesAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1975
- ELECTROCARDIOGRAMS OF MARATHON RUNNERS IN 1962 COMMONWEALTH GAMESHeart, 1964