Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (Jul 2010)

Troponin release following endurance exercise: is inflammation the cause? a cardiovascular magnetic resonance study

  • O'Hanlon Rory,
  • Wilson Mat,
  • Wage Riccardo,
  • Smith Gillian,
  • Alpendurada Francisco D,
  • Wong Joyce,
  • Dahl Annette,
  • Oxborough Dave,
  • Godfrey Richard,
  • Sharma Sanjay,
  • Roughton Michael,
  • George Keith,
  • Pennell Dudley J,
  • Whyte Greg,
  • Prasad Sanjay K

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-12-38
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 38

Abstract

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Abstract Background The aetiology and clinical significance of troponin release following endurance exercise is unclear but may be due to transient myocardial inflammation. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) affords us the opportunity to evaluate the presence of myocardial inflammation and focal fibrosis and is the ideal imaging modality to study this hypothesis. We sought to correlate the relationship between acute bouts of ultra endurance exercise leading to cardiac biomarkers elevation and the presence of myocardial inflammation and fibrosis using CMR. Methods 17 recreation athletes (33.5 +/- 6.5 years) were studied before and after a marathon run with troponin, NTproBNP, and CMR. Specific imaging parameters to look for inflammation included T2 weighted images, and T1 weighted spin-echo images before and after an intravenous gadolinium-DTPA to detect myocardial hyperemia secondary to inflammation. Late gadolinium imaging was performed (LGE) to detect any focal regions of replacement fibrosis. Results Eleven of the 17 participant had elevations of TnI above levels of cut off for myocardial infarction 6 hrs after the marathon (0.075 +/- 0.02, p = 0.007). Left ventricular volumes were reduced post marathon and a small increase in ejection fraction was noted (64+/- 1% pre, 67+/- 1.2% post, P = 0.014). Right ventricular volumes, stroke volume, and ejection fraction were unchanged post marathon. No athlete fulfilled criteria for myocardial inflammation based on current criteria. No regions of focal fibrosis were seen in any of the participants. Conclusion Exercise induced cardiac biomarker release is not associated with any functional changes by CMR or any detectable myocardial inflammation or fibrosis.