Exercise cardiac magnetic resonance to differentiate athlete’s heart from structural heart disease
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
The distinction between left ventricular (LV) dilation with mildly reduced LV ejection fraction (EF) in response to regular endurance exercise training and an early cardiomyopathy is a frequently encountered and difficult clinical conundrum. We hypothesized that exercise rather than resting measures would provide better discrimination between physiological and pathological LV remodelling and that preserved exercise capacity does not exclude significant LV damage.
We prospectively included 19 subjects with LVEF between 40 and 52%, comprising 10 ostensibly healthy endurance athletes (EA-healthy) and nine patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). In addition, we recruited five EAs with a region of subepicardial LV. Receiver operating characteristic fibrosis (EA-fibrosis). Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging was performed at rest and during supine bicycle exercise. Invasive afterload measures were obtained to enable calculations of biventricular function relative to load (an estimate of contractility). In DCM and EA-fibrosis subjects there was diminished augmentation of LVEF (5 ± 6% vs. 4 ± 3% vs. 14 ± 3%;
Functional cardiac evaluation during exercise is a promising tool in differentiating healthy athletes with borderline LVEF from those with an underlying cardiomyopathy. Excellent exercise capacity does not exclude significant LV damage.
Contributors

Guido Claessen
Author

Frédéric Schnell
Author

Jan Bogaert
Author

Mathias Claeys
Author

Nele Pattyn
Author

Frederik De Buck
Author

Steven Dymarkowski
Author

Piet Claus
Author

Francois Carré
Author

Johan Van Cleemput
Author

Andre La Gerche
Author

Hein Heidbuchel
Author

