Does playing basketball induce transient elevations of serum cardiac troponin T and I in male adolescent players?
Intense, intermittent-type sports like basketball can cause transient, benign release of cardiac troponins in healthy adolescents, which should not be misdiagnosed as acute myocardial injury.
Cardiac troponin release is generally found in adult athletes after continuous-type endurance exercises or sport competitions. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the physical stress experienced by adolescents while playing basketball, an intense, intermittent-type sport, could induce transient elevations of the serum cardiac troponin T (cTnT) and I (cTnI). Serum cTnT and cTnI levels in 10 male adolescent players (age 15.0 +/- 0.7 yr) were assessed immediately before and at 2, 4 and 24 h after a game randomly selected from a preseason basketball-training program. At 4 h following the game, serum cTnT levels in four of the ten subjects were above the cutoff of 0.01 ng . ml (-1) for myocardial injury. Two of these four subjects had values higher than the acute myocardial infarction cutoff of 0.05 ng . ml (-1). In three of the four subjects, the serum cTnI was above the cutoff of 0.06 ng . ml (-1) for myocardial injury. Nevertheless, serum cardiac troponins at 24 h had returned to pre-exercise levels. These findings suggest that the physical stress encountered during intense, intermittent-type sports could cause release of cardiac troponins in some adolescents at low risk for cardiac disease.
Nie et al. (Fri,) studied this question.