Early subclinical increase in pulmonary water content in athletes performing sustained heavy exercise at sea level: ultrasound lung comet-tail evidence

Author:

Pingitore Alessandro12,Garbella Erika34,Piaggi Paolo5,Menicucci Danilo12,Frassi Francesca12,Lionetti Vincenzo34,Piarulli Andrea12,Catapano Giosuè4,Lubrano Valter4,Passera Mirko12,Di Bella Gianluca6,Castagnini Cinzia7,Pellegrini Silvia8,Metelli Maria Rosa9,Bedini Remo12,Gemignani Angelo1210,L′Abbate Antonio23

Affiliation:

1. CNR Institute of Clinical Physiology;

2. Extreme Centre,

3. Institute of Life Sciences, Scuola Superiore Sant′Anna;

4. Fondazione CNR/Regione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio, Pisa;

5. Energy and Systems Engineering, and

6. Clinical and Experimental Department of Medicine and Pharmacology, Messina University, Messina; and

7. Department of Preclinical and Clinical Pharmacology, University of Florence, Florence;

8. Experimental Pathology, Biotechnology, Epidemiology and Infectious Disease, Pisa University;

9. Laboratory of Experimental Clinical-Chemical Analysis, AUOP, Pisa, Italy

10. Departments of 4Physiological Sciences,

Abstract

Whether prolonged strenuous exercise performed by athletes at sea level can produce interstitial pulmonary edema is under debate. Chest sonography allows to estimate extravascular lung water, creating ultrasound lung comet-tail (ULC) artifacts. The aim of the study was to determine whether pulmonary water content increases in Ironmen ( n = 31) during race at sea level and its correlation with cardiopulmonary function and systemic proinflammatory and cardiac biohumoral markers. A multiple factor analysis approach was used to determine the relations between systemic modifications and ULCs by assessing correlations among variables and groups of variables showing significant pre-post changes. All athletes were asymptomatic for cough and dyspnea at rest and after the race. Immediately after the race, a score of more than five comet tail artifacts, the threshold for a significant detection, was present in 23 athletes (74%; 16.3 ± 11.2; P < 0.01 ULC after the race vs. rest) but decreased 12 h after the end of the race (13 athletes; 42%; 6.3 ± 8.0; P < 0.01 vs. soon after the race). Multiple factor analysis showed significant correlations between ULCs and cardiac-related variables and NH2-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide. Healthy athletes developed subclinical increase in pulmonary water content immediately after an Ironman race at sea level, as shown by the increased number of ULCs related to cardiac changes occurring during exercise. Hemodynamic changes are one of several potential factors contributing to the mechanisms of ULCs.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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