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About Sudden Death In Athletes
What is Sudden Death in Athletes?
Definition of Sudden Death in an Athlete
Causes of Sudden Death in Athletes
Incidence and Prevalence of Sudden Death in Athletes
Distribution of Sudden Death Events in Athletes
Proposed Mechanisms of Sudden Death in Athletes
Definition of Sudden Death in an Athlete
Sudden death has been defined as "an abrupt unexpected death of cardiovascular cause, in which the loss of consciousness occurs within 1 to 12 hours of onset of symptoms" (1, 2). The majority of sudden deaths in athletes occur during or immediately after exercise (game, conditioning, training, etc). However, some deaths occur at rest or during sleep. Autopsy is very useful in making a definitive diagnostic determination of the cause of sudden death. Certain conditions (i.e., Long QT Syndrome, Brugada Syndrome) require detailed post-mortem biochemical and sometimes genetic studies.
In studies of sudden deaths in athletes, individuals that participated in organized competitive sports, and those that exercised regularly and vigorously and had an active lifestyle including sports, and sometimes physically conditioned military personnel were considered "athletes." Individuals that lead a sedentary lifestyle and exercise infrequently have not routinely been included into the definition of “athlete.”
Causes of Sudden Death in Athletes
The diseases responsible for sudden deaths on the athletic field have now been identified. For the most part, they include a variety of cardiovascular abnormalities as shown in figure 1. The precise disease responsible for the sudden death differs considerably with regards to age. For example, in young athletes, congenital malformations of the heart and/or vascular system cause the majority of deaths. In contrast, in older athletes who died suddenly, there is usually the evidence of atherosclerotic disease of coronary arteries.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic disease which manifests itself by the thickening of the ventricular septum and/or other segments of the left ventricle with or without a partial obstruction to the blood flow out of the left side of the heart. HCM has consistently been the single most common cardiovascular cause of sudden death. HCM is relatively common in the general population (1:500 people) (3). HCM is usually diagnosed by an imaging test (echocardiography or magnetic resonance imaging [MRI]). Electrocardiogram (ECG) is often abnormal in patients with HCM. For a schematic representation of ECG and echocardiographic image of a patient with HCM, click here. HCM is a diverse disease with various representations on the echocardiography. For a series of representations, click here.
Congenital coronary anomalies, mostly a wrong origin of the left main coronary artery, are the second most frequent cause of athletic field deaths. These anomalies may be more common than previously regarded (4). For a schematic representation of anomalous coronary origins, click here. These anomalies are usually diagnosed by echocardiography, MRI and/or coronary angiogram.
A diverse composition of approximately 15 other diseases of the heart account for the remaining athletic field deaths due to cardiovascular disease. These include rupture of the aneurysm of the aorta as a component of Marfan’s syndrome, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy, rare anomalies of coronary artery development ("bridging" of a coronary artery, congenital absence of one or more coronary artery, etc), degeneration of the structures of mitral valve (mitral valve prolapse), aortic stenosis, dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, and other pathologies. Each of these is responsible for a minor portion of sudden deaths in athletes, and presents a challenge for a physician to diagnose in the absence of symptoms.
Occasionally, athletes that die suddenly do not demonstrate any evidence of structural heart disease on autopsy (5). Such deaths may be associated with the disorders of the conduction system of the heart, such as Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, Long QT Syndrome, Brugada Syndrome, and arrhythmias related to exertion, such as catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) (5). In other instances, exercise-induced coronary spasm, a heart block or asystole with loss of consciousness (6) may be the cause of death.
There are a number of other causes of sudden death in athletes that are not related to cardiovascular disease (7, 8). These are:
Exercise-induced asthma and respiratory arrest
Exercise-induced anaphylaxis
Sarcoidosis
Malignant hyperthermia
Heat stroke
Sickle cell trait
Gastrointestinal bleeding
Rhabdomyolysis
Head trauma
Spine trauma (in pole vaulting)
Non-penetrating neck blow with rupture of cerebral artery (ice hockey)
Several deaths of athletes have been related to drug abuse. Although it is not possible to mention all drugs that have been causally linked with sudden death in athletes, the most important (9) of them are:
Ephedrine (Ma-Huang or herba ephedra)
Cocaine
Amphetamines
Anabolic steroids (oxymesterone, methandrostenolone, stanozol, etc)
Erythropoetin
Alcohol
Ergotamine derivatives
"Energy" drinks
There have been reports of sudden cardiac deaths related to vigorous exercise and starvation, semi-starvation and liquid protein diets (9). It is believed that in those cases, severe weight loss results in a decrease of the skeletal and the heart mass. Accompanying inflammation and also deficiencies in magnesium and potassium may make the myocardium more susceptible to arrhythmias. An increase in sudden death and in QT interval was associated with a liquid protein diet in a recent study (10). However, the rates of sudden death did not increase in a medically supervised weight loss program.
Commotio Cordis or Innocent Chest Blow
A relatively modest and non-penetrating blow to the chest, in the absence of underlying cardiovascular disease or injury to the chest wall itself may result in sudden cardiac death (5,11,12). On the athletic field, such an event, referred to as Commotio Cordis (which means "disturbed or agitated heart motion"), is produced by an object (i.e., ball) or by bodily collision with another athlete. A common scenario is that of a baseball player struck in the chest while batting by a pitched ball thrown at approximately 40 mph from a distance of 40 feet or farther. Catastrophes similar to this have occurred in a variety of sports (baseball, ice hockey, softball, football, karate, lacrosse, boxing, rugby and soccer), including recreational activities at home and on the playing field.
The precise mechanism responsible for the sudden death as the outcome of Commotio Cordis is not known with complete certainty, but a recently developed animal model helped answer several key questions (13). The model showed that a low-energy chest blow, when timed appropriately, creates devastating consequences by triggering ventricular fibrillation. A very narrow window of 15-30 ms prior to the peak on the ascending side of the T-wave on the ECG is a vulnerable phase of repolarization, and when the impact occurs in that interval, or ventricular fibrillation develops instantaneously and reproducibly. When the impact occurs on the QRS complex, transient or complete heart block, ventricular tachycardia develops.
Commotio Cordis is not uniformly fatal, and approximately 10% of the victims are known to have survived, usually with prompt cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation. The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation together with US Consumer Product Safety Commission (Dr. Susan B. Kyle, Ph.D.) maintains the US Commotio Cordis Registry. If you have a case of Commotio Cordis that you would like to report to The Registry, please click here. If you know of such a case, or know of a survivor of Commotio Cordis, please click here to send an alert. For recent research in Commotio Cordis, click here.
Incidence and Prevalence of Sudden Death in Athletes
The precise frequency with which sudden death in athletes occurs remains unresolved. In the past, some authors have suggested that the annual incidence of sudden deaths in young athletes is probably as low as 20 per year (14). These low estimates have placed a major obstacle on putting sudden death in athletes in its proper perspective. The most recent survey of collections of newspaper articles for the year 2000 indicates that the occurrence of these catastrophes is at least 7-10 times higher than previously believed. Estimates range from 1 in 15,000 joggers to 1 in 50,000 marathoners, representing 1 death per 50,000 to 375,000 man-hours of exercise (15). There are approximately 10 million joggers in the United States. Therefore, the number of deaths related to jogging could potentially be several hundreds per year. In addition, surveying media may grossly underestimate the true prevalence of this phenomenon, since the recognition of these events is not systematic and mostly accounts for elite or well-known athletes and those in high-visibility sports, as well as events that occur at athletic contests and draw the attention of the community. In contrast, deaths of non-elite athletes in many circumstances are probably less likely to achieve public recognition in the mainstream press and are more likely to escape reporting.
To approach estimating the prevalence of these events over several years in a systematic way and to better determine the causes of sudden death in athletes, along with other observations relating to these events, the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, with the support of the sponsors has established The US National Registry of Sudden Death in Athletes. For more on The Registry, click here.
What is Sudden Death in Athletes?
Definition of Sudden Death in an Athlete
Causes of Sudden Death in Athletes
Incidence and Prevalence of Sudden Death in Athletes
Distribution of Sudden Death Events in Athletes
Proposed Mechanisms of Sudden Death in Athletes
Definition of Sudden Death in an Athlete
Sudden death has been defined as "an abrupt unexpected death of cardiovascular cause, in which the loss of consciousness occurs within 1 to 12 hours of onset of symptoms" (1, 2). The majority of sudden deaths in athletes occur during or immediately after exercise (game, conditioning, training, etc). However, some deaths occur at rest or during sleep. Autopsy is very useful in making a definitive diagnostic determination of the cause of sudden death. Certain conditions (i.e., Long QT Syndrome, Brugada Syndrome) require detailed post-mortem biochemical and sometimes genetic studies.
In studies of sudden deaths in athletes, individuals that participated in organized competitive sports, and those that exercised regularly and vigorously and had an active lifestyle including sports, and sometimes physically conditioned military personnel were considered "athletes." Individuals that lead a sedentary lifestyle and exercise infrequently have not routinely been included into the definition of “athlete.”
Causes of Sudden Death in Athletes
The diseases responsible for sudden deaths on the athletic field have now been identified. For the most part, they include a variety of cardiovascular abnormalities as shown in figure 1. The precise disease responsible for the sudden death differs considerably with regards to age. For example, in young athletes, congenital malformations of the heart and/or vascular system cause the majority of deaths. In contrast, in older athletes who died suddenly, there is usually the evidence of atherosclerotic disease of coronary arteries.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic disease which manifests itself by the thickening of the ventricular septum and/or other segments of the left ventricle with or without a partial obstruction to the blood flow out of the left side of the heart. HCM has consistently been the single most common cardiovascular cause of sudden death. HCM is relatively common in the general population (1:500 people) (3). HCM is usually diagnosed by an imaging test (echocardiography or magnetic resonance imaging [MRI]). Electrocardiogram (ECG) is often abnormal in patients with HCM. For a schematic representation of ECG and echocardiographic image of a patient with HCM, click here. HCM is a diverse disease with various representations on the echocardiography. For a series of representations, click here.
Congenital coronary anomalies, mostly a wrong origin of the left main coronary artery, are the second most frequent cause of athletic field deaths. These anomalies may be more common than previously regarded (4). For a schematic representation of anomalous coronary origins, click here. These anomalies are usually diagnosed by echocardiography, MRI and/or coronary angiogram.
A diverse composition of approximately 15 other diseases of the heart account for the remaining athletic field deaths due to cardiovascular disease. These include rupture of the aneurysm of the aorta as a component of Marfan’s syndrome, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy, rare anomalies of coronary artery development ("bridging" of a coronary artery, congenital absence of one or more coronary artery, etc), degeneration of the structures of mitral valve (mitral valve prolapse), aortic stenosis, dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, and other pathologies. Each of these is responsible for a minor portion of sudden deaths in athletes, and presents a challenge for a physician to diagnose in the absence of symptoms.
Occasionally, athletes that die suddenly do not demonstrate any evidence of structural heart disease on autopsy (5). Such deaths may be associated with the disorders of the conduction system of the heart, such as Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, Long QT Syndrome, Brugada Syndrome, and arrhythmias related to exertion, such as catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) (5). In other instances, exercise-induced coronary spasm, a heart block or asystole with loss of consciousness (6) may be the cause of death.
There are a number of other causes of sudden death in athletes that are not related to cardiovascular disease (7, 8). These are:
Exercise-induced asthma and respiratory arrest
Exercise-induced anaphylaxis
Sarcoidosis
Malignant hyperthermia
Heat stroke
Sickle cell trait
Gastrointestinal bleeding
Rhabdomyolysis
Head trauma
Spine trauma (in pole vaulting)
Non-penetrating neck blow with rupture of cerebral artery (ice hockey)
Several deaths of athletes have been related to drug abuse. Although it is not possible to mention all drugs that have been causally linked with sudden death in athletes, the most important (9) of them are:
Ephedrine (Ma-Huang or herba ephedra)
Cocaine
Amphetamines
Anabolic steroids (oxymesterone, methandrostenolone, stanozol, etc)
Erythropoetin
Alcohol
Ergotamine derivatives
"Energy" drinks
There have been reports of sudden cardiac deaths related to vigorous exercise and starvation, semi-starvation and liquid protein diets (9). It is believed that in those cases, severe weight loss results in a decrease of the skeletal and the heart mass. Accompanying inflammation and also deficiencies in magnesium and potassium may make the myocardium more susceptible to arrhythmias. An increase in sudden death and in QT interval was associated with a liquid protein diet in a recent study (10). However, the rates of sudden death did not increase in a medically supervised weight loss program.
Commotio Cordis or Innocent Chest Blow
A relatively modest and non-penetrating blow to the chest, in the absence of underlying cardiovascular disease or injury to the chest wall itself may result in sudden cardiac death (5,11,12). On the athletic field, such an event, referred to as Commotio Cordis (which means "disturbed or agitated heart motion"), is produced by an object (i.e., ball) or by bodily collision with another athlete. A common scenario is that of a baseball player struck in the chest while batting by a pitched ball thrown at approximately 40 mph from a distance of 40 feet or farther. Catastrophes similar to this have occurred in a variety of sports (baseball, ice hockey, softball, football, karate, lacrosse, boxing, rugby and soccer), including recreational activities at home and on the playing field.
The precise mechanism responsible for the sudden death as the outcome of Commotio Cordis is not known with complete certainty, but a recently developed animal model helped answer several key questions (13). The model showed that a low-energy chest blow, when timed appropriately, creates devastating consequences by triggering ventricular fibrillation. A very narrow window of 15-30 ms prior to the peak on the ascending side of the T-wave on the ECG is a vulnerable phase of repolarization, and when the impact occurs in that interval, or ventricular fibrillation develops instantaneously and reproducibly. When the impact occurs on the QRS complex, transient or complete heart block, ventricular tachycardia develops.
Commotio Cordis is not uniformly fatal, and approximately 10% of the victims are known to have survived, usually with prompt cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation. The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation together with US Consumer Product Safety Commission (Dr. Susan B. Kyle, Ph.D.) maintains the US Commotio Cordis Registry. If you have a case of Commotio Cordis that you would like to report to The Registry, please click here. If you know of such a case, or know of a survivor of Commotio Cordis, please click here to send an alert. For recent research in Commotio Cordis, click here.
Incidence and Prevalence of Sudden Death in Athletes
The precise frequency with which sudden death in athletes occurs remains unresolved. In the past, some authors have suggested that the annual incidence of sudden deaths in young athletes is probably as low as 20 per year (14). These low estimates have placed a major obstacle on putting sudden death in athletes in its proper perspective. The most recent survey of collections of newspaper articles for the year 2000 indicates that the occurrence of these catastrophes is at least 7-10 times higher than previously believed. Estimates range from 1 in 15,000 joggers to 1 in 50,000 marathoners, representing 1 death per 50,000 to 375,000 man-hours of exercise (15). There are approximately 10 million joggers in the United States. Therefore, the number of deaths related to jogging could potentially be several hundreds per year. In addition, surveying media may grossly underestimate the true prevalence of this phenomenon, since the recognition of these events is not systematic and mostly accounts for elite or well-known athletes and those in high-visibility sports, as well as events that occur at athletic contests and draw the attention of the community. In contrast, deaths of non-elite athletes in many circumstances are probably less likely to achieve public recognition in the mainstream press and are more likely to escape reporting.
To approach estimating the prevalence of these events over several years in a systematic way and to better determine the causes of sudden death in athletes, along with other observations relating to these events, the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, with the support of the sponsors has established The US National Registry of Sudden Death in Athletes. For more on The Registry, click here.
