News Release
August 28, 2007
Contact: Christopher DeFrancesco, 860-679-3914
e-mail:
cdefrancesco@uchc.edu
Make Sure They Have the Heart for It
UConn Cardiologist: Young Athletes Need
Doc’s OK to Play
FARMINGTON, CONN. – Compared to the average person, a
well-conditioned athlete has a heart that operates more efficiently
and is better equipped to handle the rigors of physical activity.
It’s part of what makes it so shocking when an athlete –
particularly a young athlete – collapses on a playing field with a
severe heart defect.
“The arrival of the fall sports season is a good time for parents
to make sure of a few things,” says cardiologist Peter Schulman,
M.D., of the Pat and Jim Calhoun Cardiology Center at the University
of Connecticut Health Center. “While screenings are mandatory for
most youth sports programs, it is imperative that parents make sure
their sons and daughters have medical clearance before starting any
athletic activity.”
Schulman’s other message for parents is, once cleared, children
should know to speak up immediately if they become dizzy, feel faint
or are otherwise physically overcome by a practice or workout
session.
“The heart condition that causes the most deaths in adolescent
and young adult athletes is a heart muscle abnormality called
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or HCM,” Schulman says. “Some types of
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy can be detected by physical examination,
but some cannot be. It makes the headlines because the people are
athletic, they’re well-trained, they’re in excellent health, they’re
thin, they’re good-looking, some of them are famous.”
While current screening methods are not 100 percent effective in
detecting HCM, screening can reveal useful information. All UConn
student-athletes undergo physical exams every year. Schulman
assisted with the screening of nearly 200 athletes in Storrs Sunday,
Aug. 26, to determine who can participate in full activity.
While the search for more reliable detection methods is ongoing,
another characteristic of the athlete’s heart offers promise. Some
abnormalities that would be potentially devastating to those who
aren’t athletic are considered normal in well-conditioned athletes.
“It’s not unusual at all for elite athletes to have a very slow
heart rate, for example, even heart murmurs, abnormal
electrocardiograms, or electrical conduction block, which can be a
sign of really bad things in an older person,” Schulman says. “It
all has to do with the physiology of the heart.”
Physical examination and analysis of family history are still the
cardiologist’s most effective screening tools, and will continue to
be until science uncovers better ways to detect occult heart
defects.
More information about the Pat and Jim Calhoun Cardiology Center
is available at
http://heart.uchc.edu. The phone number for appointments is
860-679-3343.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of
medicine and dental medicine, the UConn Medical Group, University
Dentists, and John Dempsey Hospital, a Solucient Top 100 Hospital®
2006. Founded in 1961, the Health Center pursues a mission of
providing outstanding health care education in an environment of
exemplary patient care, research and public service. To learn more about
the UConn Health Center, visit our website at
www.uchc.edu.
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www.uchc.edu/ocomm/ for archived news releases and other
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