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Journal Article

Citation

Meyer T. J. Sci. Med. Sport 2022; 25(9): 703-704.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Sports Medicine Australia, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jsams.2022.08.013

PMID

36116902

Abstract

The survived cardiac arrest of Christian Eriksen during the European Football Championships 2020 (postponed to 2021 due to the pandemic) has shown once again that even the seemingly healthiest athletes who perform at the highest level are not immune to cardiac disease and even sudden cardiac death. Although fortunately rare, such cases are always threatening and have the potential to impair the reputation of sport despite "contradictory" findings like the ones from Orchard et al. in this issue who report a reduced death rate compared to the general population even in a contact sport like Australian Rules Football when played on elite level. In accordance with other studies this means that the beneficial effects of (even elite) sport not only outweigh its risks but that they prevail. It is possible that in elite athletes a favorable genetic make-up is responsible for parts of this positive effect. However, large-scale studies in the general population confirm these findings. Statistically, this means that even the occurrence of sport-related deaths (as sad as each individual case is) is more than compensated for by the preventive effects of regular sport.

Obviously, this does not relieve sport physicians from their permanent task to reduce the number of sport-related incidents as far as possible. During recent congresses a discussion arose about the specificity of screening examinations and the question if "it is worth spending so much money into the detection of very few cases". Such debate leads into the calculation of indicators like "money spent per saved life". Such considerations are only in borderline agreement with ethical requirements of our profession but they may remind us to rethink the most adequate make-up of screening examinations and their most appropriate distribution among active individuls. There are indications that disease patterns may differ between continents or even countries. Also, certain parts of our population, e. g. younger individuals or women, are less likely to be affected by (sport-related) sudden deaths. This means that screening strategies can be more targeted than they currently are. Such refinement...


Language: en

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