In the News
As reported by The New York Times, October 3, 2006.
Testing Athletes' Hearts May Cut Deaths
Testing athletes' hearts dramatically lowered the rate of
sports-related sudden cardiac deaths in Italy, a study suggests, but
experts said it was not clear such an effort would have as big a payoff
in the United States.
There are roughly two dozen sports-related deaths of high school and
college students from sudden cardiac arrest in the United States each
year. Only a handful of schools require electrocardiogram, or EKG,
screening.
Since 1982, Italy has required all athletes to get EKGs for hidden
heart problems before playing competitive sports, and about 2 percent
are disqualified because of heart problems.
Researchers from the University of Padua Medical School analyzed
trends in sudden deaths from heart problems before and after the program
began. They looked at both athletes and non-athletes, ages 12 to 35, in
the Veneto region of northeastern Italy between 1979 and 2004.
They found that, among athletes, the rate of sudden deaths fell by 89
percent over the 25 year-period. The rate among non-athletes did not
change.
Dr. Barry Maron, an expert on heart problems in athletes at the
Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, praised the research, which
appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
''This is an important paper,'' Maron said. ''The findings show for
the first time that pre-participation screening of young athletes is
effective, not only in recognizing otherwise unsuspected heart disease,
but also because that recognition actually reduces the risk of sudden
cardiac death during sports.''
Maron said it would be difficult and unlikely for the United States
to gear up for a similar program to screen what he estimated would be 10
million people a year.
Each year in the United States, there are 20 to 25 sudden cardiac
deaths among high school and college athletes, according to data
collected by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research.
A few U.S. universities now run screening programs that include EKGs,
said Ron Courson, director of sports medicine at the University of
Georgia, which has done the tests on would-be athletes for the past 12
years.
During that time, only one athlete has been disqualified because of
detected heart problems, although about 10 to 12 students are found to
have minor problems. They are treated and allowed to play, Courson said.
The testing costs about $20,000 a year, he said.
''In the U.S., the leading cause of death in athletic systems is
cardiac arrests,'' he said, applauding the Italian study. ''The more
data we have on this, the better equipped we are to make a decision.''
An accompanying editorial raised questions about the study, noting
that the sudden cardiac death rate before Italy's screening program was
high compared to rates found in other studies. And the lowest annual
death rate achieved after screening was similar to the U.S. rate for
high school and college athletes from 1983-93.
The editorial also noted that different heart conditions are the most
frequent cause of exercise-related sudden death in the two countries.
''I think we have to be very cautious,'' said editorial co-author Dr.
Paul Thompson of the University of Connecticut. ''You can actually cause
problems by screening. There are a lot of abnormalities out there that,
if left alone, won't actually do harm, and screening could lead to
people getting procedures done that aren't necessary.''
He added: ''There's a large medical-industrial complex willing to
embrace screening, and they just happen to sell the tools used for
screening.''
Drs. Gaetano Thiene and Domenico Corrado, co-authors of the Italian
study, said their country's higher mortality rates can be explained by
the older age and higher proportion of men compared to the U.S.
athletes. |