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The Athletic Heart

Cardiology Clinics, 1987
The clinical features of athletic hearts are confusing to physicians who are unfamiliar with them. In particular, the diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may be suggested. The clinical signs of athletes' hearts are discussed with special reference to this difficult diagnosis.
openaire   +2 more sources

Athlete’s Heart and Left Heart Disease

2018
Physical activity comprises all muscular activities that require energy expenditure. Regular sequence of structured and organized exercise with the specific purpose of improving wellness and athletic performance is defined as a sports activity.Exercise can be performed at various levels of intensity and duration.
de Gregorio, Cesare   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Athlete’s heart

2016
General issues on cardiovascular disease in pregnancy are discussed. The implications of pregnancy for individual disease entities are also discussed in relevant chapters.
Demosthenes G. Katritsis   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Normal Reference Values of Biventricular Size and Function in Male Athlete's Heart.

JACC Cardiovascular Imaging, 2019
OBJECTIVES The aim of this meta-analysis was to derive normal reference values of biventricular size and function estimated by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in competitive athletes.
F. D’Ascenzi   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Athletic Heart Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 1985
In the process of training, the getting wind, as it is called, is largely a gradual increase in the capability of the heart.... The large heart of athletes may be due to the prolonged use of their muscles, but no man becomes a great runner or oarsman who has not naturally a capable if not a large heart.1 THE heart of an athlete has certain functional ...
T P, Huston, J C, Puffer, W M, Rodney
openaire   +2 more sources

The Athletic Heart Syndrome

Current Sports Medicine Reports, 2004
The cardiovascular system adapts to exercise. With conditioning, the heart modifies its physiologic and morphologic structure. When those changes occur in athletes seeking clearance for sports participation, they comprise the athletic heart syndrome. With detraining, many of those modifications normalize, which is a diagnostic feature of the athletic ...
Brent S E, Rich, Scott A, Havens
openaire   +2 more sources

Differentiating Athlete's Heart From Cardiomyopathies - The Left Side.

Heart, Lung and Circulation, 2018
In athletes who undertake a high volume of high intensity exercise, the resultant changes in cardiac structure and function which develop as a result of physiological adaptation to exercise (so called "Athlete's Heart") may overlap with some features of ...
M. Brosnan, D. Rakhit
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Athlete's Heart: Is the Morganroth Hypothesis Obsolete?

Heart, Lung and Circulation, 2018
In 1975, Morganroth and colleagues reported that the increased left ventricular (LV) mass in highly trained endurance athletes versus nonathletes was primarily due to increased end-diastolic volume while the increased LV mass in resistance trained ...
M. Haykowsky   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Athlete's heart

Šport in zdravje, 2010
The term "athlete's heart" denotes significantly enlarged dimension and funcional abilities of the heart as a result of adaptive reaction to intensive, long-lasting sport training, primarily of the aerobic endurance type. The adequate aerobic training elicits adaptation changes in the myocard similar to those that resistance training provokes in ...
Heimer, Stjepan, Rakovac, Marija
openaire  

Athlete branding via social media: examining the factors influencing consumer engagement on Instagram

European Sport Management Quarterly, 2022
Jason Doyle, Yiran Su, Thilo Kunkel
exaly  

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