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Review
. 1991;79(4):290-305.
doi: 10.1159/000174893.

Electrocardiographic findings in athletic students and sedentary controls

Affiliations
Review

Electrocardiographic findings in athletic students and sedentary controls

H Bjørnstad et al. Cardiology. 1991.

Abstract

We have investigated resting electrocardiograms from 1,299 athletic students taken in the same laboratory during the years 1973-1982 and compared them with electrocardiograms recorded in 151 age- and sex-matched sedentary controls. Fifty-two parameters were recorded for each electrocardiogram and computerized. We found that athletic students had a significant lower heart rate, longer PQ time and a prolonged QTc compared to control subjects. Athletes had higher maximal Q amplitudes in precordial leads, higher R in V1, and higher indices of right ventricular hypertrophy (RV1 + SV5) and left ventricular hypertrophy (Sokolow-Lyon and Grant indices). Furthermore, the athletes had higher maximal ST elevation and higher maximal T wave amplitudes in precordial leads. Sinus bradycardia was more frequent in athletes. All control subjects were in sinus rhythm whereas 0.9% of the athletes had other rhythms (nodal, coronary sinus or wandering pacemaker). Athletes and control subjects did not differ significantly with regard to premature beats, atrioventricular block, bundle branch block or the Wolff-Parkinson-White pattern. We conclude that training induces significant changes in heart rate, conduction times, ST elevation. QRS and T voltage, slow rhythm disturbances and atrioventricular and sinoatrial block were infrequent in the resting electrocardiogram taken in the supine position and disappeared immediately on sitting and during exercise. Training-induced electrocardiographic changes may partly be due to alterations in autonomic tone and partly to structural changes in the myocardium. Different normal criteria for left ventricular hypertrophy may be warranted in athletes.

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