Background: The origin and clinical relevance of exercise-induced premature ventricular beats (PVBs) in patients without coronary heart disease or cardiomyopathies is unknown. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance enables us to non-invasively assess myocardial scarring and oedema. The purpose of our study was to discover any evidence of myocardial anomalies in patients with exercise-induced ventricular premature beats.
Methods: We examined 162 consecutive patients presenting palpitations and documented exercise-induced premature ventricular beats (PVBs) but no history or evidence of structural heart disease. Results were compared with 70 controls matched for gender and age. ECG-triggered, T2-weighted, fast spin echo triple inversion recovery sequences and late gadolinium enhancement were obtained as well as LV function and dimensions.
Results: Structural anomalies in the myocardium and/or pericardium were present in 85 % of patients with exercise-induced PVBs. We observed a significant difference between patients with PVBs and controls in late gadolinium enhancement, that is 68 % presented subepicardial or midmyocardial lesions upon enhancement, whereas only 9 % of the controls did so (p < 0.0001). More patients presented pericardial enhancement (35 %) or pericardial thickening (27 %) compared to controls (21 % and 13 %, p < 0.0001). Myocardial oedema was present in 37 % of the patients and in only one control, p < 0.0001. Left ventricular ejection fraction did not differ between patients and controls (63.1 ± 7.9 vs. 64.7 ± 7.0, p = 0.13).
Conclusions: The majority of patients with exercise-associated premature ventricular beats present evidence of myocardial disease consistent with acute or previous myocarditis or myopericarditis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-015-0204-3 | DOI Listing |
J Clin Med
November 2024
Faculty of Medicine, Pasteur University Hospital, 06000 Nice, France.
Europace
December 2024
Department of Medicine, The University of Melbourne, Grattan St, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia.
Athletes are predisposed to atrial arrhythmias but the association between intense endurance exercise training, ventricular arrhythmias (VAs), and sudden cardiac death is less well established. Thus, it is unclear whether the 'athlete's heart' promotes specific arrhythmias or whether it represents a more general pro-arrhythmogenic phenotype. Whilst direct causality has not been established, it appears possible that repeated exposure to high-intensity endurance exercise in some athletes contributes to formation of pro-arrhythmic cardiac phenotypes that underlie VAs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sports Med Phys Fitness
November 2024
National Italian Olympic Committee, Institute of Sports Medicine and Science, Rome, Italy.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol
October 2024
Cardiology Division, Department of Internal Medicine, Central Virginia VA Health Care System/McGuire Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia, USA; Cardiology Division/Pauley Heart Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA. Electronic address:
Background: The significance of autonomic dysfunction in premature ventricular contraction-induced cardiomyopathy (PVC-CM) remain unknown.
Objectives: Utilizing a novel "dual stressor" provocative challenge combining exercise with premature ventricular contraction (PVCs), the authors characterized the functional and molecular mechanisms of cardiac autonomic (cardiac autonomic nervous system) remodeling in a PVC-CM animal model.
Methods: In 15 canines (8 experimental, 7 sham), we implanted pacemakers and neurotelemetry devices and subjected animals to 12 weeks of bigeminal PVCs to induce PVC-CM.
Int Heart J
June 2024
Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine.
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