Re: Kikken Randal gets DVT



romie@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
See www.fasterskier.com for Kikkan's blog and Anchorage Daily News
article on her medical condition.

Something in the newspaper article, referring particularly to the
effects of long-distance travel, that I didn't know:

"Some endurance athletes are at particular DVT risk because they have a
low resting heart rate. That means the blood flow to large muscles is
reduced and may be more prone to clot."

rm


Interesting comment in the article. Having a lower resting heart rate
should not increase your risk of DVT at all. The predominant reason a
trained athlete's heart rate is lower than say, mine :), is that they
have a larger stroke volume, and when sitting at rest, their cardiac
output (blood flow per unit time) is the same as mine would be with a
higher heart rate but lower stroke volume.

The venous system in the muscles don't "know" what your heart rate is.
They only "know" what the resulting (non-pulsatile) blood flow per unit
time is. For a given cardiac output, vasomotor tone state, and
workload/exercise state (in this case sitting at rest), the blood flow
through the deep veins of the leg would be the same, irrespective of the
heart rate.

So having a low resting heart rate does not mean you would have lower
flow through the leg veins, more stasis, or a greater risk of developing
DVT than the average camper. (If your heart rate's low because you're on
say, beta-blockers, then it's a different story... but let's not go
there...)

Clinically, we certainly don't tend to see an over-representation of
highly trained athletes amongst those in the same age group who suffer
DVTs. Epidemiologically, it is not a significant independent indicator
of risk for DVT.

Cheers,
Chris

telemark@xxxxxxxxxx


.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Kikken Randal gets DVT
    ... Having a lower resting heart rate should not increase your risk of DVT at all. ... The predominant reason a trained athlete's heart rate is lower than say, mine:), is that they have a larger stroke volume, and when sitting at rest, their cardiac output (blood flow per unit time) is the same as mine would be with a higher heart rate but lower stroke volume. ...
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