| Literature DB >> 30043692 |
Irfan M Asif, Jonathan A Drezner, Francis G O'Connor.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 30043692 PMCID: PMC5315265 DOI: 10.1177/1941738116680188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Health ISSN: 1941-0921 Impact factor: 3.843
Executive summary
| 1. The overall role of the preparticipation physical evaluation (PPE) is to evaluate the health of the athlete to optimize safe sports participation. |
| 2. Early detection of athletes at risk for sudden cardiac arrest and death (SCA/D) is an important objective of the PPE for athletes. |
| 3. The primary goal of cardiovascular screening of athletes is to identify underlying cardiac disorders predisposing to SCA/D with the intent to reduce morbidity and mortality by mitigating risk through individualized, patient-centered, and disease-specific medical management. |
| 4. The natural history and absolute risk of conditions associated with SCA/D in athletes identified with a cardiac disorder during screening is largely unknown with limited outcomes-based evidence. |
| 5. Exercise is a known trigger and can unmask occult cardiac disease to precipitate SCA/D. |
| 6. The differential risk of SCA/D between athletes and nonathletes is not fully understood based on current epidemiologic evidence. |
| 7. Athletes display a differential risk for SCA/D based on age, sex, race, sport, and level of play. |
| 8. The current PPE history and physical examination, while pragmatic and widely practiced, is limited in its ability to identify athletes with conditions at risk for SCA/D. |
| 9. The electrocardiogram (ECG) increases early detection of some cardiac disorders associated with SCA/D. |
| 10. ECG interpretation accuracy and reliability are challenges with the principal concern of adding false-positive results to the PPE screening process. |
| 11. Results from centers with considerable experience in athlete ECG screening have demonstrated improved detection of cardiac conditions with potential risk for SCA/D and decreased false-positive rates. |
| 12. While there is general agreement that early detection of cardiovascular conditions associated with SCA/D in athletes is important, the absence of clear outcomes-based research at this time precludes the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) from endorsing a single or universal cardiovascular screening strategy for all athletes. |
| 13. AMSSM supports individual physician autonomy to assess the current evidence and implement the most appropriate cardiovascular screening strategy unique to their athlete population and community resources. |
| 14. Considerations for implementing a cardiovascular screening strategy in a targeted athlete population should include the risk of SCA/D, the available infrastructure and cardiology resources, and the physician assessment that screening for early detection of cardiac disorders has a favorable risk-benefit ratio that will improve athlete outcomes with limited harm. |
| 15. Physicians incorporating ECG in the cardiovascular screening process should optimize strategies to assure accurate ECG interpretation and adequate cardiology resources to conduct the secondary evaluation of ECG abnormalities. |
| 16. No screening program provides absolute protection against SCA/D; an emergency action plan (EAP) and access to an automated external defibrillator (AED) are essential to improve outcomes from SCA in athletes. |
| 17. AMSSM is committed to evidenced-based research, education, and policy initiatives that will validate and promote the most efficacious strategies to foster safe sport participation and reduce SCA/D in athletes. |