Cardiac structure and function in response to a multi-stage marathon over 4486 km
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology

Abstract
To investigate whether participation in the Trans Europe Foot Race 2009 (TEFR), an ultramarathon race held over 64 consecutive days and 4486 km, led to changes in cardiac structure and function.
Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 20 of 67 participating runners (two women; mean ± SD age 47.8 ± 10.4 years) at three time points (baseline scan at 294 ± 135 km (B), scan two at 1735 ± 86 km (T1) and scan three at 3370 ± 90 km (T2)) during the TEFR. Imaging included an assessment of left ventricular structure (mass) and function (strain). In parallel, cardiac troponin I, NT-pro-BNP, myostatin and GDF11 were determined in venous blood samples. A subsample of ten runners returned for a follow-up scan eight months after the race.
Left ventricular mass increased significantly (B, 158.5 ± 23.8 g; T1, 165.1 ± 23.2 g; T2, 167 ± 24.6 g;
High exercise-induced cardiac volume load for >2 months in ultra-endurance runners results in a physiological structural adaptation with no sign of adverse cardiovascular remodelling.
Contributors

Florian Sagmeister
Author

Atilgan Yilmaz
Author

Christopher Klenk
Author

Denis Infanger
Author

Horst Brunner
Author

Christian Billich
Author

Jürgen Scharhag
Author

Thomas Nickel
Author

Michael Vogeser
Author

Meinrad Beer
Author

Uwe Schütz
Author


