Does endurance training affect echocardiographic findings differently in female versus male elite athletes compared to sedentary controls?
Endurance training induces similar echocardiographic changes in men and women, but LV wall thickness >13 mm is only seen in male athletes, suggesting such findings in female athletes warrant further cardiac evaluation.
We compared echocardiographic findings in female (n=30) and male (n=30) endurance athletes to age-matched female (n=15) and male (n=15) sedentary controls. The differences between athletes and controls were similar in both sexes; only left ventricular (LV) mass and septum thickness differed slightly more in men than in women (67% vs 55%, P=0.004, and 36% vs 30%, P=0.03, respectively). LV wall thicknesses were in the normal range in all women, while four (13%) male athletes exceeded 13 mm. In conclusion, the effects of endurance training on echocardiographic findings appear to be quite similar in women and men. However, in female athletes with an abnormally thick left ventricular wall a thorough cardiac evaluation is indicated. This contrasts with male athletes, in whom LV wall thicknesses of over 13 mm are a not uncommon finding.
Stolt et al. (Tue,) studied this question.