It is well known that athletes and in particular endurance athletes have lower resting heart rates than non-athletes. This has generally been considered a healthy adaptation. Traditionally this was thought… Click to show full abstract
It is well known that athletes and in particular endurance athletes have lower resting heart rates than non-athletes. This has generally been considered a healthy adaptation. Traditionally this was thought be due to increased vagal tone. Several studies have shown that endurance athletes continue to have lower heart rates in the absence of autonomic influence suggesting bradycardia is due to intrinsic changes within the heart. A subset of endurance athletes have very low heart rates with Tour de France cyclists having described heart rates in the 30s. It is unclear whether in these elite athletes with very low heart rates the profound bradycardia is due to autonomic influence or intrinsic changes within the heart. The aim of this study was to determine if extreme bradycardia in athletes is due to excess vagal tone or more profound intrinsic changes within the heart. We recruited three cohorts for this study: non-athlete controls (NA), endurance athletes with a documented resting heart rate >40 (EA) and endurance athletes with a resting heart rate <40 (BA). All participants underwent baseline testing including ECG, echocardiography and VO2 max testing. All participants came back on a second occasion for treatment with dual autonomic blockade (DAB) to determine intrinsic heart rate in the following manner. After resting supine for five minutes resting heart rate was measured. Participants were then administered 0.04mg/kg of intravenous atropine. After five minutes participants were then administered 0.05mg/kg of intravenous metoprolol. This was repeated every five minutes until there was no further drop in heart rate or 0.2mg/kg had been administered. The resting heart rate at this stage was recorded as the intrinsic heart rate. Parasympathetic blockade was confirmed by lack of response to Valsalva manoeuvre and sympathetic blockade was confirmed by lack of response to metoprolol. VO2 max testing was then performed to determine maximum heart rate. 9 NA (7 male), 10 EA (8 male) and 5 BA (4 male) participated in this study. The average age was similar in all groups (NA 32.9y, EA 32.4y, BA 31.4y). The average resting heart rate was 71.7 in the NA group, 48.3 in the EA group and 41.6 in the BA group (p<0.05 for comparisons between all three groups). Following dual autonomic blockade resting heart rate was 86.0 in the NA group, 76.9 in the EA group and 64.4 in the BA group (p<0.05 for comparisons between all three groups). Maximum heart rate under DAB was 140.1 in the NA group, 138.0 in the EA group and 140.4 in the BA group. These differences were not significant. In athletes with very low heart rates, bradycardia is due to more profound intrinsic changes within the heart. NHMRC Project Grant
               
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