Abstract
         
         The left ventricular volume (EDV), the left ventricular total volume (TDV), and the
            stroke volume (SV) of 40 male untrained subjects and 68 endurance athletes were determined
            using one-dimensional echocardiography, two-dimensional echocardiography, and, a combined
            method. The accuracy of the volume and stroke volume measurements was checked by comparing
            them to ergometrically determined maximum oxygen pulse (max O2-P) and to radiographic heart volume (HV).
         
         
         There was clear improvement in the EDV, TDV, and SV measurements when using two-dimensional
            echocardiography and the combined method in comparison to one-dimensional echocardiography.
            The best correlation to the max-O2-P was reached by TDV2 (combined method, r = 0.8738). This method includes the myocardium of the left ventricle similar to heart
            volume measurements. The relationship is as close as between HV and max O2-P (r = 0.8665). The method suggested here is sufficiently accurate to be used in performance
            diagnosis to determine the size of the left ventricular volume and to classify pathological
            size changes or those due to training.
         
         
         
            
Key words
         
         
            two-dimensional echocardiography - left ventricular volume - stroke volume - heart
               volume - maximum oxygen pulse