RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Predominance of normal left ventricular geometry in the male ‘athlete's heart’ JF Heart JO Heart FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Cardiovascular Society SP 1264 OP 1271 DO 10.1136/heartjnl-2014-305904 VO 100 IS 16 A1 Victor Utomi A1 David Oxborough A1 Euan Ashley A1 Rachel Lord A1 Sarah Fletcher A1 Mike Stembridge A1 Rob Shave A1 Martin D Hoffman A1 Greg Whyte A1 John Somauroo A1 Sanjay Sharma A1 Keith George YR 2014 UL http://heart.bmj.com/content/100/16/1264.abstract AB Aims This study evaluated (a) global LV adaption to endurance versus resistance training in male athletes, (b) LV assessment using by modern imaging technologies and (c) the impact of scaling for body size on LV structural data. Methods A prospective cross-sectional design assessed the LV in 18 elite endurance-trained (ET), 19 elite resistance-trained (RT) and 17 sedentary control (CT) participants. Standard 2D, tissue Doppler and speckle tracking echocardiography assessed LV structure and function. Indexing of LV structures to body surface area (BSA) was undertaken using ratio and allometric scaling. Results Absolute and scaled LV end-diastolic volume (ET: 43.7±6.8; RT: 34.2±7.4; CT 32.5±8.9 mL/m1.5; p<0.05) and LV mass (ET: 29.8±6.6; RT: 25.4±8.7; CT 25.9±6.4 g/m2.7; p < 0.05) were significantly higher in ET compared with RT and CT. LV wall thickness were not different between ET and RT. 65% of ET and 95% of RT had normal geometry. Stroke volume was higher in ET compared with both RT and CT (p<0.05). Whilst regional tissue velocity data were not different between groups, longitudinal and basal circumferential strain (ε) was reduced in RT compared with ET. Conclusions In this comprehensive evaluation of the male athlete's heart (AH), normal LV geometry was predominant in both athlete groups. In the ET, 30% demonstrated an eccentric hypertrophy with no concentric hypertrophy in RT. Cardiac ε data in RT require further evaluation, and any interpretation of LV size should appropriately index for differences in body size.