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Abnormal EKG Risky for Some Athletes

Abnormal results from electrocardiograms (EKGs) may be an
early warning sign of rare heart problems in some athletes.

Italian researchers report that news in The New England Journal of
Medicine
.

Most athletes have strong, healthy hearts. But some have genetic, structural
heart problems that can be fatal, even though the athlete has no symptoms .

Doctors from Italy's National Olympic Committee have been studying athletes'
EKGs, searching for clues about those heart problems, which are called
cardiomyopathies.

More than 12,000 young, elite Italian athletes got EKGs between 1979 and
2001. They were followed for nine years, on average.

During that time, 81 athletes had abnormal EKGs with no signs of structural
heart problems at the time of the EKG . Only five of them
developed cardiomyopathies, including one who died while training despite
orders not to train or compete because of heart risks.

For comparison, no cases of cardiomyopathy developed among 229 top-notch
Italian athletes who had normal EKGs during the study period.

Athletes with abnormal EKGs may need "greater diagnostic scrutiny and
continued clinical surveillance," write Antonio Pelliccio, MD, and
colleagues.

They add that a normal EKG "can be regarded as reasonably reliable
evidence to exclude the presence of potentially lethal cardiac disease and can
serve as a source of reassurance to young athletes."

By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved

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