11 results on '"Baggish AL"'
Search Results
2. Perceived Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy and Suicidality in Former Professional Football Players.
- Author
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Grashow R, Terry DP, Iverson GL, DiGregorio H, Dairi I, Brown C, Atkeson PS, Whittington AJ, Reese L, Kim JH, Konstantinides N, Taylor HA, Speizer FE, Daneshvar DH, Zafonte RD, Weisskopf MG, and Baggish AL
- Abstract
Importance: Participation in American-style football (ASF) has been linked to chronic traumatic encephalopathy neuropathological change (CTE-NC), a specific neuropathologic finding that can only be established at autopsy. Despite being a postmortem diagnosis, living former ASF players may perceive themselves to have CTE-NC. At present, the proportion and clinical correlates of living former professional ASF athletes with perceived CTE who report suicidality are unknown., Objective: To determine the proportion, clinical correlates, and suicidality of living former professional ASF players with perceived CTE., Design, Setting, and Participants: A cross-sectional study within the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University was conducted from 2017 to 2020. Using electronic and paper surveys, this population-based study included former ASF players who contracted with a professional league from 1960 to 2020 and volunteered to fill out a baseline survey. Data for this study were analyzed from June 2023 through March 2024., Exposures: Data included demographics, football-related exposures (eg, position, career duration), and current health problems (anxiety, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depression, diabetes, emotional and behavioral dyscontrol symptoms, headache, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, low testosterone level, pain, sleep apnea, and subjective cognitive function)., Main Outcomes and Measures: The proportion of participants reporting perceived CTE. Univariable and multivariable models were used to determine clinical and suicidality correlates of perceived CTE., Results: Among 4180 former professional ASF players who volunteered to fill out a baseline survey, 1980 (47.4%) provided follow-up data (mean [SD] age, 57.7 [13.9] years). A total of 681 participants (34.4%) reported perceived CTE. Subjective cognitive difficulties, low testosterone level, headache, concussion signs and symptoms accrued during playing years, depressive/emotional and behavioral dyscontrol symptoms, pain, and younger age were significantly associated with perceived CTE. Suicidality was reported by 171 of 681 participants with perceived CTE (25.4%) and 64 of 1299 without perceived CTE (5.0%). After adjusting for established suicidality predictors (eg, depression), men with perceived CTE remained twice as likely to report suicidality (odds ratio, 2.06; 95% CI, 1.36-3.12; P < .001)., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that approximately one-third of living former professional ASF players reported perceived CTE. Men with perceived CTE had an increased prevalence of suicidality and were more likely to have health problems associated with cognitive impairment compared with men without perceived CTE. Perceived CTE represents a novel risk factor for suicidality and, if present, should motivate the diagnostic assessment and treatment of medical and behavioral conditions that may be misattributed to CTE-NC.
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- 2024
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3. Prevalence of Inflammatory Heart Disease Among Professional Athletes With Prior COVID-19 Infection Who Received Systematic Return-to-Play Cardiac Screening.
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Martinez MW, Tucker AM, Bloom OJ, Green G, DiFiori JP, Solomon G, Phelan D, Kim JH, Meeuwisse W, Sills AK, Rowe D, Bogoch II, Smith PT, Baggish AL, Putukian M, and Engel DJ
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- Adult, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Return to Sport, SARS-CoV-2, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Athletes statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 epidemiology, Heart Diseases epidemiology, Mass Screening methods
- Abstract
Importance: The major North American professional sports leagues were among the first to return to full-scale sport activity during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Given the unknown incidence of adverse cardiac sequelae after COVID-19 infection in athletes, these leagues implemented a conservative return-to-play (RTP) cardiac testing program aligned with American College of Cardiology recommendations for all athletes testing positive for COVID-19., Objective: To assess the prevalence of detectable inflammatory heart disease in professional athletes with prior COVID-19 infection, using current RTP screening recommendations., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study reviewed RTP cardiac testing performed between May and October 2020 on professional athletes who had tested positive for COVID-19. The professional sports leagues (Major League Soccer, Major League Baseball, National Hockey League, National Football League, and the men's and women's National Basketball Association) implemented mandatory cardiac screening requirements for all players who had tested positive for COVID-19 prior to resumption of team-organized sports activities., Exposures: Troponin testing, electrocardiography (ECG), and resting echocardiography were performed after a positive COVID-19 test result. Interleague, deidentified cardiac data were pooled for collective analysis. Those with abnormal screening test results were referred for additional testing, including cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and/or stress echocardiography., Main Outcomes and Measures: The prevalence of abnormal RTP test results potentially representing COVID-19-associated cardiac injury, and results and outcomes of additional testing generated by the initial screening process., Results: The study included 789 professional athletes (mean [SD] age, 25 [3] years; 777 men [98.5%]). A total of 460 athletes (58.3%) had prior symptomatic COVID-19 illness, and 329 (41.7%) were asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic (minimally symptomatic). Testing was performed a mean (SD) of 19 (17) days (range, 3-156 days) after a positive test result. Abnormal screening results were identified in 30 athletes (3.8%; troponin, 6 athletes [0.8%]; ECG, 10 athletes [1.3%]; echocardiography, 20 athletes [2.5%]), necessitating additional testing; 5 athletes (0.6%) ultimately had cardiac magnetic resonance imaging findings suggesting inflammatory heart disease (myocarditis, 3; pericarditis, 2) that resulted in restriction from play. No adverse cardiac events occurred in athletes who underwent cardiac screening and resumed professional sport participation., Conclusions and Relevance: This study provides large-scale data assessing the prevalence of relevant COVID-19-associated cardiac pathology with implementation of current RTP screening recommendations. While long-term follow-up is ongoing, few cases of inflammatory heart disease have been detected, and a safe return to professional sports activity has thus far been achieved.
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- 2021
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4. Metabolic Cost of Exercise Initiation in Patients With Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction vs Community-Dwelling Adults.
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Shah RV, Schoenike MW, Armengol de la Hoz MÁ, Cunningham TF, Blodgett JB, Tanguay M, Sbarbaro JA, Nayor M, Rouvina J, Kowal A, Houstis N, Baggish AL, Ho JE, Hardin C, Malhotra R, Larson MG, Vasan RS, and Lewis GD
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- Aged, Body Mass Index, Cohort Studies, Exercise Test, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity physiopathology, Heart Failure physiopathology, Oxygen Consumption physiology
- Abstract
Importance: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is a joint metabolic and cardiovascular disorder with significant noncardiac contributions., Objective: To define and quantify the metabolic cost of initiating exercise in individuals with and without HFpEF and its functional consequences., Design, Setting, and Participants: This prospective cohort study included individuals with hemodynamically confirmed HFpEF from the Massachusetts General Hospital Exercise Study (MGH-ExS) and community-dwelling participants from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS). Analysis began April 2016 and ended November 2020., Exposures: Internal work (IW), a measure of work equivalents required to initiate movement., Main Outcomes and Measures: Using breath-by-breath oxygen uptake (V̇o2) measurements and V̇o2-work rate associations, cost of initiating exercise (IW) in patients with HFpEF (MGH-ExS) and in community-dwelling individuals (FHS) was quantified. Linear regression was used to estimate associations between IW and clinical/hemodynamic measures., Results: Of 3231 patients, 184 (5.7%) had HFpEF and were from MGH-ExS, and 3047 (94.3%) were community-dwelling individuals from FHS. In the MGH-ExS cohort, 86 (47%) were women, the median (interquartile range) age was 63 (53-72) years, and the median (interquartile range) peak V̇o2 level was 13.33 (11.77-15.62) mL/kg/min. In the FHS cohort, 1620 (53%) were women, the median (interquartile range) age was 54 (48-60) years, and the median (interquartile range) peak V̇o2 level was 22.2 (17.85-27.35) mL/kg/min. IW was higher in patients with HFpEF and accounted for 27% (interquartile range, 21%-39%) of the total work (IW + measured external workload on the cycle), compared with 15% (interquartile range, 12%-20%) of that in FHS participants. Body mass index accounted for greatest explained variance in patients with HFpEF from MGH-ExS and FHS participants (22% and 18%, respectively), while resting cardiac output and biventricular filling pressures were not significantly associated with variance in IW in patients with HFpEF. A higher IW in patients with HFpEF was associated with a greater increase in left- and right-sided cardiac filing pressure during unloaded exercise, despite similar resting hemodynamic measures across IW., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that internal work, a new body mass index-related measure reflecting the metabolic cost of initiating movement, is higher in individuals with HFpEF compared with middle-aged adults in the community and is associated with steep, early increases in cardiac filling pressures. These findings highlight the importance of quantifying heterogeneous responses to exercise initiation when evaluating functional intolerance in individuals at risk for or with HFpEF.
- Published
- 2021
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5. Cardiac Structure and Function in Elite Female and Male Soccer Players.
- Author
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Churchill TW, Petek BJ, Wasfy MM, Guseh JS, Weiner RB, Singh TK, Schmied C, O'Malley H, Chiampas G, and Baggish AL
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Stroke Volume, United States, Ventricular Remodeling, Young Adult, Athletes, Echocardiography, Electrocardiography, Soccer
- Abstract
Importance: Population-specific normative data are essential for the evaluation of competitive athletes. At present, there are limited data defining normal electrocardiographic (ECG) and echocardiographic values among elite US soccer players., Objective: To describe ECG and echocardiographic findings in healthy elite US soccer players., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study analyzed Fédération Internationale de Football Association-mandated screening sessions performed at US Soccer National Team training locations from January 2015 to December 2019. US women's and men's national team soccer players undergoing mandated cardiovascular screening were included., Main Outcomes and Measures: Normal training-related and abnormal ECG findings were reported using the International Recommendations for Electrocardiographic Interpretation in Athletes. Echocardiographic measurements of structural and functional parameters relevant to cardiovascular remodeling were assessed relative to American Society of Echocardiography guideline-defined normal ranges., Results: A total of 238 athletes (122 [51%] female; mean [SD] age, 20 [4] years; age range, 15-40 years) were included. Male athletes demonstrated a higher prevalence of normal training-related ECG findings, while female athletes were more likely to have abnormal ECG patterns (14 [11%] vs 0 in male cohort), largely accounted for by abnormal T-wave inversions. Echocardiography revealed no pathologic findings meeting criteria for sport restriction, but athletes frequently exceeded normal ranges for structural cardiac parameters responsive to exercise-induced remodeling including body surface area-indexed left ventricular (LV) mass (58 of 113 female athletes [51%] and 67 of 114 male athletes [59%]), indexed LV volume (89 of 115 female athletes [77%] and 76 of 111 male athletes [68%]), and LV wall thickness (37 of 122 female athletes [30%] and 47 of 116 male athletes [41%]). Age-stratified analysis revealed age-dependent increases in LV wall thickness, mass, and volumes among female athletes and LV wall thickness and mass among male athletes., Conclusions and Relevance: These data represent the first set of comprehensive normative values for elite US soccer players and one of the largest sport-specific echocardiographic remodeling studies in female athletes. Abnormal ECG findings were more common in female athletes, while both female and male athletes frequently exceeded clinical normality cut points for remodeling-associated echocardiographic parameters.
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- 2021
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6. Coronavirus Disease 2019 and the Athletic Heart: Emerging Perspectives on Pathology, Risks, and Return to Play.
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Kim JH, Levine BD, Phelan D, Emery MS, Martinez MW, Chung EH, Thompson PD, and Baggish AL
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- Athletes, COVID-19 epidemiology, Cardiology, Death, Sudden, Cardiac epidemiology, Death, Sudden, Cardiac etiology, Humans, COVID-19 complications, Death, Sudden, Cardiac prevention & control, Mass Screening methods, Pandemics, Return to Sport, SARS-CoV-2, Sports Medicine standards
- Abstract
Importance: Cardiac injury with attendant negative prognostic implications is common among patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection. Whether cardiac injury, including myocarditis, also occurs with asymptomatic or mild-severity COVID-19 infection is uncertain. There is an ongoing concern about COVID-19-associated cardiac pathology among athletes because myocarditis is an important cause of sudden cardiac death during exercise., Observations: Prior to relaxation of stay-at-home orders in the US, the American College of Cardiology's Sports and Exercise Cardiology Section endorsed empirical consensus recommendations advising a conservative return-to-play approach, including cardiac risk stratification, for athletes in competitive sports who have recovered from COVID-19. Emerging observational data coupled with widely publicized reports of athletes in competitive sports with reported COVID-19-associated cardiac pathology suggest that myocardial injury may occur in cases of COVID-19 that are asymptomatic and of mild severity. In the absence of definitive data, there is ongoing uncertainty about the optimal approach to cardiovascular risk stratification of athletes in competitive sports following COVID-19 infection., Conclusions and Relevance: This report was designed to address the most common questions regarding COVID-19 and cardiac pathology in athletes in competitive sports, including the extension of return-to-play considerations to discrete populations of athletes not addressed in prior recommendations. Multicenter registry data documenting cardiovascular outcomes among athletes in competitive sports who have recovered from COVID-19 are currently being collected to determine the prevalence, severity, and clinical relevance of COVID-19-associated cardiac pathology and efficacy of targeted cardiovascular risk stratification. While we await these critical data, early experiences in the clinical oversight of athletes following COVID-19 infection provide an opportunity to address key areas of uncertainty relevant to cardiology and sports medicine practitioners.
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- 2021
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7. Cardiac Data From the Women's National Basketball Association-Caring for Women Requires Studying Women.
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Baggish AL
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- Athletes, Echocardiography, Female, Humans, Incidence, Basketball
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- 2020
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8. Association of Ascending Aortic Dilatation and Long-term Endurance Exercise Among Older Masters-Level Athletes.
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Churchill TW, Groezinger E, Kim JH, Loomer G, Guseh JS, Wasfy MM, Isselbacher EM, Lewis GD, Weiner RB, Schmied C, and Baggish AL
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- Aorta physiopathology, Aortic Diseases diagnosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dilatation, Pathologic, Echocardiography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Aorta diagnostic imaging, Aortic Diseases etiology, Athletes, Endurance Training adverse effects, Exercise physiology
- Abstract
Importance: Aortic dilatation is frequently encountered in clinical practice among aging endurance athletes, but the distribution of aortic sizes in this population is unknown. It is additionally uncertain whether this may represent aortic adaptation to long-term exercise, similar to the well-established process of ventricular remodeling., Objective: To assess the prevalence of aortic dilatation among long-term masters-level male and female athletes with about 2 decades of exercise exposure., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study evaluated aortic size in veteran endurance athletes. Masters-level rowers and runners aged 50 to 75 years were enrolled from competitive athletic events across the United States from February to October 2018. Analysis began January 2019., Exposures: Long-term endurance exercise., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was aortic size at the sinuses of Valsalva and the ascending aorta, measured using transthoracic echocardiography in accordance with contemporary guidelines. Aortic dimensions were compared with age, sex, and body size-adjusted predictions from published nomograms, and z scores were calculated where applicable., Results: Among 442 athletes (mean [SD] age, 61 [6] years; 267 men [60%]; 228 rowers [52%]; 214 runners [48%]), clinically relevant aortic dilatation, defined by a diameter at sinuses of Valsalva or ascending aorta of 40 mm or larger, was found in 21% (n = 94) of all participants (83 men [31%] and 11 women [6%]). When compared with published nomograms, the distribution of measured aortic size displayed a rightward shift with a rightward tail (all P < .001). Overall, 105 individuals (24%) had at least 1 z score of 2 or more, indicating an aortic measurement greater than 2 SDs above the population mean. In multivariate models adjusting for age, sex, body size, hypertension, and statin use, both elite competitor status (rowing participation in world championships or Olympics or marathon time under 2 hours and 45 minutes) and sport type (rowing) were independently associated with aortic size., Conclusions and Relevance: Clinically relevant aortic dilatation is common among aging endurance athletes, raising the possibility of vascular remodeling in response to long-term exercise. Longitudinal follow-up is warranted to establish corollary clinical outcomes in this population.
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- 2020
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9. Weight Gain, Hypertension, and the Emergence of a Maladaptive Cardiovascular Phenotype Among US Football Players.
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Kim JH, Hollowed C, Liu C, Al-Badri A, Alkhoder A, Dommisse M, Gowani Z, Miller A, Nguyen P, Prabakaran G, Sidoti A, Wehbe M, Galante A, Gilson CL, Clark C, Ko YA, Quyyumi AA, and Baggish AL
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- Adolescent, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Phenotype, Pulse Wave Analysis, Systole, United States epidemiology, Universities, Young Adult, Athletes, Football, Hypertension epidemiology, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular epidemiology, Vascular Stiffness, Weight Gain
- Abstract
Importance: Former US football athletes are at increased risk of cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality compared with the general population and other professional athletes. However, responsible maladaptive CV phenotypes have not been fully characterized., Objective: To address the emergence and progression of multiple independent factors associated with CV risk across serial years of collegiate US football participation., Design, Setting, and Participants: Collegiate US football athletes from 2 National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I programs were recruited as freshmen between June 2014 and June 2017 and analyzed at multiple points throughout 3 complete years of collegiate US football participation (until January 2019). Excluded athletes were those who did not complete any season of US football training because of injury, illness, or leaving the team. Factors associated with CV risk assessed clinically, by transthoracic echocardiography, and by vascular applanation tonometry were recorded., Exposures: The exposure of interest was seasonal US football exposure, including training, competition, and the training environment., Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcome measures were left ventricular mass index and geometry (cardiac structure), early diastolic myocardial relaxation velocity (E'; diastolic function), and pulse-wave velocity (arterial stiffness)., Results: Of 186 individuals recruited as freshmen, 126 athletes were included in analyzed data. Collegiate US football athletes (62 white individuals [49%]; 63 black individuals [50%]; 77 nonlinemen [61%]; 49 linemen [39%]; 126 male individuals [100%]) weighed a mean (SD) of 101.1 (21.0) kg, with a mean systolic blood pressure of 129.1 (11.6) mm Hg at baseline of the freshman season. Adjusting for race, height, and player position, there were significant increases in weight (mean [SE] Δ, 4.74 [0.6] kg; P < .001), systolic blood pressure (mean [SE] Δ, 11.6 [1.6] mm Hg; P < .001), and pulse-wave velocity (mean [SE] Δ, 0.24 [0.09] m/s; P = .007), and significant declines in E' (mean [SE] Δ, -1.7 [0.3] cm/s; P < .001) across 3 years of US football participation. Weight gain was associated with both arterial stiffening (increased pulse-wave velocity, β = 0.01 [SE, 0.004]; P = .003) and the development of concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (odds ratio, 1.09 [95% CI, 1.05-1.14]; P < .001); increased systolic blood pressure was also associated with arterial stiffening (β = 0.01 [SE, 0.003]; P = .007) and the development of concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (odds ratio, 1.04 [95% CI, 1.01-1.07]; P = .02)., Conclusions and Relevance: Collegiate US football athletes who gain weight and develop increased systolic blood pressure levels are at risk for the development of a pathologic CV phenotype characterized by concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, arterial stiffening, and reduced left ventricular diastolic function. Future work aimed at optimizing CV health in this population, who are young but uniquely at risk, is warranted.
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- 2019
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10. Mortality Among Professional American-Style Football Players and Professional American Baseball Players.
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Nguyen VT, Zafonte RD, Chen JT, Kponee-Shovein KZ, Paganoni S, Pascual-Leone A, Speizer FE, Baggish AL, Taylor HA Jr, Nadler LM, Courtney TK, Connor A, and Weisskopf MG
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- Adult, Aged, Athletes, Cardiovascular Diseases mortality, Cause of Death, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neurodegenerative Diseases mortality, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, United States epidemiology, Baseball statistics & numerical data, Football statistics & numerical data, Mortality
- Abstract
Importance: Studies of American-style football players have suggested lower overall mortality rates compared with general populations, but with possibly increased neurodegenerative mortality. However, comparisons with general populations can introduce bias. This study compared mortality between US National Football League (NFL) and US Major League Baseball (MLB) players, a more appropriate comparison group of professional athletes., Objective: To compare all-cause and cause-specific mortality between NFL and MLB players., Design, Setting, and Participants: In this retrospective cohort study, the setting was US mortality from January 1, 1979, through December 31, 2013. The dates of analysis were January 2016 to April 2019. Participants were 3419 NFL and 2708 MLB players with at least 5 playing seasons., Exposures: Participation in the NFL compared with the MLB., Main Outcomes and Measures: Vital status and causes of death from the National Death Index from 1979 through 2013 were obtained. Cox proportional hazards regression models using age as the timescale were used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs to examine all-cause and cause-specific mortality among NFL players compared with MLB players, adjusted for race and decade of birth., Results: By the end of follow-up, there were 517 deaths (mean [SD] age, 59.6 [13.2] years) in the NFL cohort and 431 deaths (mean [SD] age, 66.7 [12.3] years) in the MLB cohort. Cardiovascular and neurodegenerative conditions, respectively, were noted as underlying or contributing causes in 498 and 39 deaths in the NFL and 225 and 16 deaths in the MLB. Compared with MLB players, NFL players had significantly elevated rates of all-cause (HR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.10-1.44), cardiovascular disease (HR, 2.40; 95% CI, 2.03-2.84), and neurodegenerative disease (HR, 2.99; 95% CI, 1.64-5.45) mortality. Comparing hypothetical populations of 1000 NFL and 1000 MLB players followed up to age 75 years, there would be an excess 21 all-cause deaths among NFL players, as well as 77 and 11 more deaths with underlying or contributing causes that included cardiovascular and neurodegenerative conditions, respectively., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that NFL players had elevated all-cause, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative mortality rates compared with MLB players, although the absolute number of excess neurodegenerative deaths was still small. Factors that vary across these sports (eg, body habitus and head trauma) as opposed to those common across sports (eg, physical activity) could underlie the differences.
- Published
- 2019
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11. Cardiac Variables in Professional Basketball Players: Looking Closely at the Normal Big Athlete (NBA).
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Baggish AL
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- Athletic Performance, Humans, Return to Sport, Athletes, Basketball
- Published
- 2016
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