Locations:
Search IconSearch

To Prevent Sudden Death in Student Athletes, Look Beyond the ECG

Universal ECG screening doesn’t add to protection of student athletes

690×380-Teen-Athlete

The approach to screening young athletes and measuring the potential risk of sudden death is an important issue that could mean the difference between an adolescent reaching his or her potential in competitive sports — or perhaps being disqualified for play.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

That’s a message at the heart of a talk pediatric cardiologist Kenneth Zahka, MD, is delivering this week at Cleveland Clinic Children’s Pediatric Innovation Summit at the Global Center for Health Innovation in downtown Cleveland.

His presentation, “Sports Clearance: What Do I Need to Know?” is part of the Annual Helen and Ronald Ross Symposium on Pediatric Cardiology at the start of the summit on June 11.

Sudden death in young people: Getting a proper perspective on risk

Sudden death in young athletes has attracted a great deal of interest, leading to calls for mandatory pre-participation screening guidelines.

That, in turn, has led to debate about the most effective and practical methods for diagnosing a wide array of cardiovascular diseases known to cause sudden death, including the following leading causes:

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Coronary artery anomalies
  • Indeterminate left ventricular hypertrophy
  • Myocarditis
  • Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
  • Mitral valve prolapse

This heightened interest has also raised concerns about screenings being exclusionary and discriminatory since most sudden deaths due to genetic disease are in nonathletes.

Dr. Zahka points out that recent data show the risk of sudden death in U.S. college athletes attributable to cardiovascular disease to be relatively low (1.2/100,000 athlete participation-years) and similar to the combined risk of suicide and death from drug abuse. And among causes of sudden death for all 15- to 24-year-olds in the U.S. population, major cardiovascular diseases rank fifth, after motor vehicle accidents, homicides, suicides and cancer.

Advertisement

Sorting out the screening options — and the role of ECG

There are several different approaches to screening young athletes for risk of sudden death from cardiovascular causes, including:

  • Not screening anyone
  • Screening everyone through family history and physical exam
  • Screening with careful family history, physical exam and electrocardiography (ECG)

While ECG can detect some cardiovascular diseases and benefit some individuals, it is not considered an ideal or effective test when applied to large, healthy populations, according to statements from the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC).

“When you look at the data and at the recent recommendations from the AHA and ACC, it comes down to the notion that we should do a family history, a personal history and a physical exam as the core basis of our screening,” Dr. Zahka says. “The ECG does not add significantly to the identification and protection of the student athlete.”

He also warns that there is a high false-positive rate for ECG, which can disqualify a number of individuals from competitive sports. “There is a very low mortality risk in general,” he notes. “We need to be careful about how we decide. Doing an ECG separate from a clinical assessment and history has a lot of potential for raising a false-positive concern.”

The general public is subject to the same diseases and anomalies that can cause sudden cardiac death or heart failure in athletes, he adds.

Dr. Zahka says the sports medicine team at Cleveland Clinic worked through all the data and made a recommendation that supports the AHA and ACC recommendations — i.e., that ECGs are not going to be helpful in most young athletes.

Advertisement

For asymptomatic young athletes in whom the history and physical exam do prompt the need for further evaluation, unique skills and expertise — often from a multidisciplinary team — are required to identify the appropriate tests. At Cleveland Clinic’s Sports Cardiology Center, the health of athletes of all ages is the focus of multiple adult-care and pediatric specialists, including cardiologists, cardiothoracic surgeons, exercise physiologists, sports pulmonologists, dietitians and psychologists.

Recommendations that promise greater impact

Dr. Zahka notes that the AHA and ACC recommend promoting development of team-based care at schools that involves athletic trainers, team physicians, school nurses, primary care providers, cardiologists and cardiac subspecialists. The recommendations also call for educating athletes, coaches and front-line providers on the warning signs and symptoms of sudden cardiac arrest.

“We should focus on the training of staff in the schools and everywhere for high-quality CPR and the availability of automated external defibrillators (AEDs),” he says. “Those two things have saved many more lives.”

Advertisement

Related Articles

19-HRT-6507 Vitals-650×450
Rani duplicate post Check Out These Outcomes

A sampling of outcome and volume data from our Heart & Vascular Institute

illustration of the human heart focused on the left atrial appendage
Takeaways From Updated STS Guidelines for Surgical Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation

Concomitant AF ablation and LAA occlusion strongly endorsed during elective heart surgery

illustration of a figure-of-8 stitch for aortic valve repair
Figure-of-8, Hitch-Up Stitch Is Safe and Durable in Bicuspid Aortic Valve Repair

Large retrospective study supports its addition to BAV repair toolbox at expert centers

histology image of lung tissue showing spread through air spaces (STAS)
Lung Cancer Study Links Preoperative Factors With Spread Through Air Spaces

Young age, solid tumor, high uptake on PET and KRAS mutation signal risk, suggest need for lobectomy

x-ray of bone fracture in a forearm
TRAVERSE Substudy Links Testosterone Therapy to Increased Fracture Risk in Older Men With Hypogonadism

Surprise findings argue for caution about testosterone use in men at risk for fracture

echocardiogram showing severe aortic regurgitation
Early Referral for Enlarged Roots Critical to Prevent Residual AR After Aortic Root Replacement With Valve Reimplantation

Residual AR related to severe preoperative AR increases risk of progression, need for reoperation

photo of intubated elderly woman in hospital bed
Proteomic Study Characterizes Markers of Frailty in Cardiovascular Disease and Their Links to Outcomes

Findings support emphasis on markers of frailty related to, but not dependent on, age

3D transesophageal echocardiographic images
New Leaflet Modification Technique Curbs LVOT Obstruction Risk in Valve-in-Valve TMVR

Provides option for patients previously deemed anatomically unsuitable

Ad