COVID-19 Infection in Ultramarathon Runners: Findings of the Ultrarunners Longitudinal TRAcking Study.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-09 DOI:10.1097/JSM.0000000000001252
James R Jastifer, Ethan J Jastifer, Martin D Hoffman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Ultramarathon runners are a unique patient population who have been shown to have a lower rate of severe chronic medical conditions. This study aimed to determine the effect that COVID-19 infection has had on this population and their running behavior.

Design: The Ultrarunners Longitudinal TRAcking (ULTRA) Study is a large longitudinal study of ultramarathon runners. Questions on health status, running behavior, and COVID-19 infection were included in the most recent survey.

Setting: Community survey.

Participants: Seven hundred thirty-four ultramarathon runners participated in the study.

Interventions: None.

Main outcome measures: Personal, exercise, and COVID-19 infection history.

Results: 52.7% of study participants reported having been symptomatic from a COVID-19 infection, with 6.7% testing positive multiple times. Participants required a total of 4 days of hospitalization. The most common symptoms included fever (73.6%), fatigue (68.5%), sore throat (68.2%), runny nose (67.7%), and cough (67.4%). Cardiovascular symptoms, which are of particular interest in the running population, included shortness of breath (46.3%), tachycardia (44.7%), chest pain (36.2%), and wheezing (33.3%). A total of 50 subjects (6.8%) reported long COVID (symptoms lasting more than 12 weeks).

Conclusions: Severe COVID-19 infection has been rare in this population of ultramarathon runners, although symptomatic infection that affects running is common. To support the well-being of this group of highly active athletes, clinicians should appreciate that cardiovascular symptoms are common and the long-term significance of these symptoms in runners is unknown.

Level of evidence: Level 2 prospective study.

超级马拉松运动员的 COVID-19 感染:超级马拉松运动员纵向追踪研究的发现
目的:超级马拉松运动员是一个特殊的患者群体,他们患有严重慢性疾病的比例较低。本研究旨在确定 COVID-19 感染对这一人群及其跑步行为的影响:超级马拉松运动员纵向跑步研究(ULTRA)是一项针对超级马拉松运动员的大型纵向研究。最近一次调查中包含了有关健康状况、跑步行为和 COVID-19 感染的问题:环境:社区调查:干预措施:无:干预措施:无:主要结果测量:个人、运动和 COVID-19 感染史:52.7%的研究参与者表示曾有过感染 COVID-19 的症状,其中 6.7% 的参与者多次检测结果呈阳性。参与者总共需要住院 4 天。最常见的症状包括发烧(73.6%)、疲劳(68.5%)、喉咙痛(68.2%)、流鼻涕(67.7%)和咳嗽(67.4%)。心血管症状在跑步人群中尤为突出,包括气短(46.3%)、心动过速(44.7%)、胸痛(36.2%)和喘息(33.3%)。共有 50 名受试者(6.8%)报告了长期 COVID(症状持续 12 周以上):结论:虽然影响跑步的无症状感染很常见,但在超级马拉松运动员中,严重感染 COVID-19 的情况并不多见。为了支持这群高度活跃的运动员的健康,临床医生应认识到心血管症状很常见,而这些症状对跑步者的长期影响尚不清楚:二级前瞻性研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
7.40%
发文量
185
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ​Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine is an international refereed journal published for clinicians with a primary interest in sports medicine practice. The journal publishes original research and reviews covering diagnostics, therapeutics, and rehabilitation in healthy and physically challenged individuals of all ages and levels of sport and exercise participation.
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