Cardiac cycle timing intervals in university varsity athletes

Author:

Singh Jyotpal1,Ellingson Chase J.1,Ellingson Cody A.1,Scott Parker2,Neary J. Patrick1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Kinesiology and Health Studies University of Regina Regina Canada

2. College of Kinesiology University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACTCardiac cycle timing events in varsity athletes serve an important function for baseline assessment but are not reported in the literature. The purpose of this study was to characterise the cardiac cycle timing intervals and contractility parameters in university‐level varsity athletes. 152 males and 93 females were assessed using a non‐invasive seismocardiography cardiac sensor attached to the sternum for 1‐minute. Shorter isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT), systolic time, mitral valve open to E‐wave (MVO to E) time, rapid ejection period (REP), atrial systole to mitral valve closure (AS to MVC) time, and diastolic performance index (IVRT/systolic time) were found in females, while heart rate was lower in males. Varying differences in timing intervals were found between sports. Systolic times were longer in male and female basketball players, while diastole was shortest in male football players, who also had higher heart rates than the other male sport athletes. These results add reference cardiac cycle timing data to the literature and imply that male and female athletes show different cardiac characteristics. Team differences suggest that different training for different sports can result in unique cardiac function changes, however, these appear to be related to the sex of the participants. The addition of these cardiac cycle timing intervals adds a valuable comparative tool to better understand cardiac physiology in the varsity athletic population.

Funder

Mitacs

MITACS

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,General Medicine

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