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Endurance cycling tied to lasting heart damage.


People who compete in grueling long-distance bicycle races are in great physical shape. But a study now suggests that the endurance training Endurance training is the deliberate act of exercising to increase stamina and endurance. Exercises for endurance tends to be aerobic in nature versus anaerobic movements. Aerobic exercise develops slow twitch muscles.  they undergo could do long-term harm to their hearts.

Researchers in Switzerland located 62 Swiss bicyclers, all men, an average of 38 years after they had competed in the Tour de Suisse The Tour de Suisse (English: Tour of Switzerland) is a UCI ProTour stage race held annually in June. The race debuted in 1933 and has evolved in timing, duration and sponsorship since then.  race. As a control group, the researchers examined 52 men whose chief exercise for much of their lives had been golf. The researchers took a blood sample from each man and checked for signs of heat trouble. Men in both groups had an average age in the mid-60s and had comparable body weights and blood pressures. Although the former cyclists This is an incomplete list. Please add to this list if you are aware of an omission. This is a list of cyclists by decade. Cyclists by decade
Cyclists before the 1880s
  • James Moore
Cyclists of the 1880s
  • Frank Bowden
 were exercising slightly more, both groups had similar heart-pumping capacity.

The blood samples revealed that the former cyclists averaged more than twice as much b-type natriuretic peptide B-type natriuretic peptide See BNP. , a natural compound that can identify people at risk of heart failure. Eight of the cyclists, but only one of the golfers, had worrisome concentrations of peptide, says cardiologist Cardiologist
Doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating heart diseases.

Mentioned in: Electrophysiology Study of the Heart, Lithotripsy


cardiologist

a physician who specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease.
 Christine H. Attenhofer Jost of HerzGefaasZentrum, a Zurich clinic.

Further tests revealed that the former cyclists' hearts had significantly larger left and right atria Atria
The heart has four chambers. The right and left atria are at the top of the heart and receive returning blood from the veins. The right and left ventricles are at the bottom of the heart and act as the body's main pumps.
 than did the golfers'. Increased size of these heart chambers could be a sign of permanent damage, Jost says. Enlarged atria are associated with heart-rhythm problems, but in this study, anyone with rhythm abnormalities had been excluded from the start.

The large atria didn't come as a complete surprise, Jost says. "We're seeing so many of these patients who were formerly professional athletes in endurance sports 20 and 40 years out" Some need pacemakers Pacemakers Definition

A pacemaker is a surgically-implanted electronic device that regulates a slow or erratic heartbeat.
Purpose

Pacemakers are implanted to regulate irregular contractions of the heart (arrhythmia).
 for heart-rhythm irregularities, she says.

People pursuing most sports, even strenuous ones, need notbe concerned, she says. "This was the extreme end of the spectrum;' she says. However, she cautions, "marathon runners will fall into the same category" as the elite bicyclists.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:PHYSIOLOGY
Author:Seppa, Nathan
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EXSI
Date:Nov 26, 2005
Words:310
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