AI Article Synopsis

  • Athletes often face interruptions in training due to injuries, such as a knee injury, and advanced testing methods like echocardiography and cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) can help evaluate their heart and lung functions during recovery.
  • The study involved 28 non-professional athletes with knee issues undergoing pre-surgery assessments, measuring factors like heart strain and oxygen consumption, revealing specific correlations between their physical activity and cardiac efficiency.
  • Despite being less active due to injury, athletes can still achieve maximal CPET results; however, decreased heart and lung performance may contribute to, or result from, their injuries, indicating a need for careful functional evaluation before surgery.

Article Abstract

Background: An athlete's career inevitably goes through periods of forced physical exercise interruption like a knee injury. Advanced echocardiographic methods and cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) are essential in evaluating athletes in the period elapsing after the injury. However, the feasibility of a maximal pre-surgery CPET and the capacity of resting advanced echocardiographic techniques to predict cardiorespiratory capacity still need to be clarified.

Methods: We evaluated 28 non-professional athletes aged 18-52, involved in prevalently aerobic or alternate aerobic/anaerobic sports activities, affected by a knee pathology with indications for surgical treatment. The evaluation was performed at rest by trans-thoracic echocardiography, including global longitudinal strain (GLS) and myocardial work (MW) assessment, and during exercise by CPET.

Results: The percent-predicted peak oxygen consumption (peak VO2%) was 82.8±13.7%, the mean respiratory exchange ratio was 1.16±0.08, and the mean ventilation/carbon dioxide (VE/VCO2) slope was 24.23±3.36. Peak VO2% negatively correlated with GLS (r=-0.518, P=0.003) and global wasted work (GWW) (r =-0.441, P=0.015) and positively correlated with global work efficiency (GWE) (r=0.455, P=0.012). Finally, we found that the VE/VCO2 slope during exercise was negatively correlated with GWE (r=-0.585, P=0.001) and positively correlated with GWW (r=0.499, P=0.005).

Conclusions: A maximal CPET can be obtained in deconditioned athletes because of a knee injury, allowing a comprehensive functional pre-surgery evaluation. In these patients, peak VO2 is reduced due to decreased physical activity after injury; however, a lower cardiopulmonary efficiency may be a concause of the injury itself. In addition, we demonstrated that the MW indexes obtained at rest could predict exercise capacity and ventilatory efficiency as evaluated by CPET.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S0022-4707.24.15496-5DOI Listing

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