Int J Sports Med 1997; 18(3): 213-216
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-972622
Orthopedics and Clinical Science

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Brief Report: Healed Myocarditis as a Cause of Ventricular Repolarization Abnormalities in Athlete's Heart

P. Zeppilli1 , C. Santini1 , S. Cameli1 , A. Dello Russo1 , C. Picani1 , A. Giordano2 , A. Frustaci3
  • 1Centre Studi di Medicina dello Sport, Istituto di Medicina Interna
  • 2Istituto di Medicina Nucleare
  • 3Istituto di Cardiologia, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
09 March 2007 (online)

In the past myocarditis has been suggested as a possible cause of repolarization abnormalities in sportsmen, but, to our knowledge, no direct in-vivo demonstration of this relationship has so far been found. We report the cases of three professional athletes with repolarization changes at rest and/or during exercise and mild segmental wall motion anomalies in the left ventricle on echocardiography, in whom myocarditis was diagnosed by non-invasive and invasive clinical investigations, including endomyocardial biopsy. We think that probably the frequency with which myocarditis is responsible for electrocardiographic and echocardiographic abnormalities in athletes has so far been underestimated, and that caution must be employed when interpreting minor segmental wall motion abnormalities on resting and exercise echocardiograms in trained subjects as being due to athlete's hart, especially when they present with repolarization changes.

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