Utility of MRI and CT in Sports Cardiology.

IF 5.2 1区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Radiographics Pub Date : 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1148/rg.240045
Prabhakar Shantha Rajiah, Vinayak Kumar, Blanca Domenech-Ximenos, Marco Francone, Jordi Broncano, Thomas G Allison
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Sports cardiologists specialize in the care of competitive athletes and highly active people by detecting and managing cardiovascular diseases that can impact sports participation and counseling on return to sports after cardiovascular events. Preparticipation evaluation of athletes includes history, physical examination, and electrocardiography (ECG), with exercise ECG added when screening master athletes. If the findings are abnormal or inconclusive, echocardiography is used for further evaluation. Further imaging with MRI, CT, or stress test is performed for establishing a diagnosis when echocardiography is indeterminate or discordant with clinical features and for risk stratification if echocardiography provides a definitive diagnosis. MRI can help distinguish athlete's heart from similar-appearing pathologic entities when echocardiography is inconclusive. Athlete's heart can manifest as left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), left ventricle (LV) dilatation, prominent LV trabeculations, and right ventricular (RV) dilatation. Adaptive LVH in athletes is concentric and typically measures less than 16 mm, which distinguishes it from pathologic LV thickening of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypertension, valvular disease, and infiltrative cardiomyopathies. Adaptive LV dilatation with normal or mildly reduced ejection fraction can be seen in endurance athletes. LV ejection fraction greater than 40%, augmentation of LV ejection fraction with exercise, and normal or supranormal diastolic function distinguishes it from dilated cardiomyopathy. Physiologic RV dilatation in athletes is distinguished from arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (RV type) by global involvement and absence of major regional wall motion abnormalities or late gadolinium enhancement. MRI is also useful in diagnosis and risk stratification of athletes with cardiovascular symptoms and after major cardiovascular events such as arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, and resuscitated sudden cardiac death or arrest. CT angiography provides accurate evaluation of coronary artery anomalies and coronary artery disease. ©RSNA, 2025 Supplemental material is available for this article.

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来源期刊
Radiographics
Radiographics 医学-核医学
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
5.50%
发文量
224
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Launched by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in 1981, RadioGraphics is one of the premier education journals in diagnostic radiology. Each bimonthly issue features 15–20 practice-focused articles spanning the full spectrum of radiologic subspecialties and addressing topics such as diagnostic imaging techniques, imaging features of a disease or group of diseases, radiologic-pathologic correlation, practice policy and quality initiatives, imaging physics, informatics, and lifelong learning. A special issue, a monograph focused on a single subspecialty or on a crossover topic of interest to multiple subspecialties, is published each October. Each issue offers more than a dozen opportunities to earn continuing medical education credits that qualify for AMA PRA Category 1 CreditTM and all online activities can be applied toward the ABR MOC Self-Assessment Requirement.
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