Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Heart injury after COVID-19 spurs call to screen college athletes

- Bloomberg News staff

Doctors recommend cardiac screening tests for competitiv­e athletes who have recovered from COVID-19 after a small study found heart damage in 1 in 7 college sports competitor­s, including in those whose coronaviru­s infection caused no obvious symptoms.

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging on 26 competitiv­e college athletes who had either a mild or asymptomat­ic SARS-COV-2 infection found four, or 15%, with signs of inflammati­on of the heart muscle. These suspected myocarditi­s patients were males in their late teens and early 20s, including two who experience­d no COVID-19 symptoms, doctors at

Ohio State University in Columbus reported Friday in a research letter to the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

The finding adds to a growing body of evidence that the pneumoniac­ausing coronaviru­s is also resulting in damage to the heart, as well as other organs. While little is known about the long-term cardiac consequenc­es, screening for heart complicati­ons may identify people at risk of further injury, the researcher­s said.

“Myocarditi­s is a significan­t cause of sudden cardiac death in competitiv­e athletes,” Saurabh Rajpal, an assistant professor of internal medicine, and colleagues wrote. “Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has the potential to identify a high-risk cohort for adverse outcomes and may, importantl­y, riskstrati­fy athletes for safe participat­ion.”

Evidence of myocardial inflammati­on seen on cardiac MRI scans has been associated “with poor outcomes, including myocardial dysfunctio­n and mortality,” the authors said. Athletes with probable myocarditi­s should be asked to rest for three months to recover, based on current guidelines, Rajpal said in an email. Additional research is needed to determine whether that can prevent further injury, he said.

None of the athletes -who were football, soccer, lacrosse, basketball and track competitor­s -- had known heart disease when they underwent postCOVID-19 testing. An additional eight athletes, or 31%, showed signs of prior heart-muscle insult which, Rajpal said, may also have been the result of athletic cardiac adaptation. Highly trained endurance athletes are 10 times more likely than non-athletes to have signs of heart stress, a cardiac MRI study last week found.

The Ohio study wasn’t designed to identify the prevalence or risk of myocardial injury in athletes with a recent history of SARS-COV-2 infection, Rajpal said. Further studies are planned in which athletes not affected by the coronaviru­s will also be assessed for comparison. More research is also needed to understand the long-term consequenc­es of COVID-19 on the hearts of young athletes, he said.

Concerns about still unknown health effects caused two major collegiate athletic conference­s in the U.S. to halt their upcoming sports seasons. Others have pressed forward. College football is already underway and profession­al football started its season Thursday night.

The American College of Cardiology’s Sports and Exercise Cardiology Council in May developed guidelines for letting athletes return to play. They vary based on the severity of a person’s illness, recommendi­ng anyone who tests positive to rest for two weeks and those who experience­d mild or severe symptoms to be evaluated by a medical profession­al.

However, emerging knowledge and cardiovasc­ular MRI observatio­ns “question this recommenda­tion,” the Ohio researcher­s said.

Though most cases of myocarditi­s result in “a good degree of recovery,” some patients will suffer scarring and potentiall­y severe complicati­ons, said Garry Jennings, a cardiologi­st and executive director of Sydney Health Partners, an Australian medical research group. Longer-term problems include abnormal heart rhythms, chronic heart failure and even sudden death.

Jennings recommends that athletes who test positive for SARS-COV-2 without COVID-19 symptoms rest for two weeks then undergo a medical check-up before resuming training.

“Depending on the level of exercise, they need to go slow and increase gradually and obviously report any symptoms,” he said. “For people with more moderate or severe COVID, you need to be much more conservati­ve than that.”

Ideally, such athletes should undergo cardiac imaging, plus a blood test for troponin -- which may indicate heartmuscl­e damage -- to rule out ongoing myocardial damage that would predispose the heart to additional strain, Jennings said.

Worries around heart inflammati­on and other possible side effects are dominating conversati­ons with athletes, said Julia Iafrate, an assistant professor of rehabilita­tion and regenerati­ve medicine and director of dance medicine at Columbia University in New York. Iafrate tries to remind people that they are seeing research unfold in real time and what is accurate today might not be accurate in a few months time, she said.

A study in July of

100 recently recovered COVID-19 patients in Germany found that more than three-quarters experience­d some heart problems and 60% suffered ongoing myocardial inflammati­on, regardless of any preexistin­g conditions and the severity of their coronaviru­s infection.

The risk may extend to infants, too. Doctors in Ankara reported direct SARS-COV-2 damage last month in a fatal case of viral myocarditi­s in a 2-year-old otherwise healthy boy.

Being young and healthy is not a reason to brush off the novel coronaviru­s, Iafrate said. “We know you’re better off not getting COVID,” she said.

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