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Left atrial function in elite athletes: A meta‐analysis of two‐dimensional speckle tracking echocardiographic studies
Author(s) -
Cuspidi Cesare,
Tadic Marijana,
Sala Carla,
Gherbesi Elisa,
Grassi Guido,
Mancia Giuseppe
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
clinical cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.263
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-8737
pISSN - 0160-9289
DOI - 10.1002/clc.23180
Subject(s) - medicine , atrial fibrillation , speckle tracking echocardiography , cardiology , meta analysis , athletes , ejection fraction , physical therapy , heart failure
Background We sought to investigate left atrial (LA) volume, function, and strain in elite athletes by a meta‐analysis including echocardiographic studies that provided volumetric and strain analysis of LA phasic function. Methods The OVID‐MEDLINE, PubMed, and Cochrane CENTRAL databases were searched for English‐language articles without time restriction up to February 2018 through focused and high sensitive search strategies . Studies were identified by crossing the following search terms: “athletes,” “left atrial size,” “left atrial volume,” “atrial function,” “atrial strain,” “atrial strain rate,” “echocardiography,” “2D speckle echocardiography.” Results Meta‐analysis included 403 athletes and 314 active but not trained healthy controls from 9 studies. Pooled data showed that average LA volume index was higher in athletes than in healthy controls (28.0 ± 1.0 vs 20.7 ± 0.8 mL/m 2 , P < 0.001). Global LA longitudinal strain, showing LA reservoir function, was lower in the athletes than in healthy controls with borderline significance (37.0 ± 1.2 vs 38.3 ± 1.5%, P = 0.044). Late diastolic LA strain rate, resembling LA contractile function, was also lower in elite athletes than in control group (−1.56 ± 0.08 vs −1.74 ± 0.09 seconds −1, P = 0.007). Conclusions Our meta‐analysis shows that LA volume is higher, while LA reservoir and contractile functions are impaired in elite athletes during active training compared to untrained controls. Whether these changes persist during deconditioning periods remains to be determined. These alterations may be related to the higher risk of arrhythmias, in particular atrial fibrillation, reported among middle/old aged athletes.

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