1. Aerobic fitness is a potential crucial factor in protecting paralympic athletes with locomotor impairments from atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk
- Author
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Loretta Corsi, Antonio Spataro, Riccardo Lanzano, Francisco Javier Ordonez, Antonella Mattei, Dimitri Mandolesi, Claudio Marini, Federica Alviti, Fabiana Parisi, Emanuele Guerra, Barbara Di Giacinto, Paolo Emilio Adami, Pietro Giacomo Curatulo, Maria Rosaria Squeo, Marco Bernardi, Silvio Romano, Donatella Dante, Evgeny Mashkovskiy, and Anatomía y Embriología Humana
- Subjects
paralympic sports ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sports medicine ,Population ,VO ,Physical exercise ,Spinal cord injury ,2peak ,cardiovascular primary prevention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Aerobic exercise ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Risk factor ,education ,lower limb amputation ,education.field_of_study ,Lower limb amputation ,VO2peak ,Cardiovascular primary prevention ,biology ,Paralympic sports ,business.industry ,Athletes ,030229 sport sciences ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Obesity ,spinal cord injury ,Blood pressure ,Physical therapy ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
PurposeTo test the hypothesis that aerobic fitness is inversely related to the risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ACVD) in athletes with locomotor impairments deriving from health conditions, such as spinal cord injury (SCI), lower limb amputation, cerebral palsy, poliomyelitis, and other health conditions different from the previous ones.MethodsA total of 68 male athletes who competed in either summer or winter Paralympic games were divided in two health conditions groups (35 with SCI, mean age 37.28.0 years, and 33 with different health conditions, mean age 37.89.9 years) and in four sport type groups (skill, power, intermittent-mixed metabolism-and endurance). They were evaluated through anthropometric and blood pressure measurements, laboratory blood tests, and graded cardiopulmonary maximal arm cranking exercise test, with oxygen uptake peak (VO2peak) measurement. Cardiovascular risk profile was assessed in each athlete.ResultsThe prevalence of ACVD-risk factors in the overall population was 20.6% for hypertension; 47% and 55.9% for high values of total and LDL cholesterol, respectively; 22.1% for reduce glucose tolerance; and 8.8% for obesity. No difference was found between athletes with and without SCI, while the prevalence of obesity was significantly higher in those practicing skill sports (22.7%, p=0.035), which was the sport type group with Paralympic athletes with the lowest VO2peak (22.5 +/- 5.70 ml kg(-1) min(-1)). VO2peak was lower in athletes with SCI than those with different health conditions (28.6 +/- 10.0 vs 33.6 +/- 8.9 ml kg(-1) min(-1)p=0.03), and in those with 3-4 risk factors (19.09 +/- 5.34 ml kg(-1) min(-1)) than those with 2 risk factors (27.1 +/- 5.50 ml kg(-1) min(-1)), 1 risk factor (31.6 +/- 8.55 ml kg(-1) min(-1)), or none (36.4 +/- 8.76 ml kg(-1) min(-1)) (p, Open access funding provided by Universita degli Studi dell'Aquila within the CRUI-CARE Agreement.
- Published
- 2021