Tackling Cardiovascular Health Risks in College Football Players
Author(s) -
Gary Balady,
Jonathan A. Drezner
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.113.004039
Subject(s) - medicine , football , admiration , sports medicine , family medicine , preventive healthcare , gerontology , medical education , physical therapy , public health , psychology , nursing , law , political science , psychotherapist
> “ It’s not whether you get knocked down; it’s whether you get up ” - Vince Lombardi There is no doubt that the life of a college football player is demanding and rigorous, yet the rewards are many. Teamwork, physical fitness, admiration and prestige, financial scholarships, and perhaps, privilege; all while doing something you love—playing football.Article see p 524Football players are widely recognized for their physical prowess. Decades of research have demonstrated that physical activity and fitness are associated with lower all-cause mortality and a variety of health benefits in healthy individuals and individuals with chronic diseases.1 The specific mechanisms responsible for these outcomes appear to be multifactorial and include a reduction in cardiovascular risk factors, and favorable effects on thrombosis, inflammation, endothelial function, and autonomic tone.2 However, a distinction must be made between competitive sports and recreational exercise, the latter from which the majority of research on the benefits of exercise are derived. The physiological and emotional demands during training and performance of competitive athletics are indeed quite different. Competitive athletes participate in an organized sport that rewards athletic excellence and achievement and requires systematic training and regular competition. Accordingly, these athletes characteristically extend themselves to high levels of effort for long periods of time, often doing so regardless of other considerations.3Although the health benefits of regular exercise and physical activity are unequivocal, and overall cardiovascular risks during exercise and sports activities appear to be low, a small proportion of athletes often with undiagnosed pathological cardiac conditions are at risk of tragic cardiovascular events.4 Most known hazards described in football players are traumatic, and these include musculoskeletal injury and the newly described, very disturbing potential risk of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.5 Yet, sudden cardiac death is the leading medical cause of death …
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