Prevalence and significance of T-wave inversion in children practicing sport: A prospective, 4-year follow-up study

2019 
Abstract Background T-wave inversion (TWI) is rare in athlete's heart but is a common manifestation in cardiomyopathies. Although TWI has been extensively investigated in adult athletes, the ability of this ECG pattern to distinguish between a physiological variant and a developing heart muscle disease in children is controversial. The aim of this longitudinal study was to establish the prevalence, changes and clinical significance of TWI in a large cohort of pre-adolescent athletes. Methods 2227 children (mean age 12.3 ± 2.0 years) undergoing sports preparticipation screening were included. Children with TWI underwent yearly follow-up until the positivisation of TWI for a maximum follow-up of 4 years. Results Among 2227 children, 358 (16%) had TWI. Children with TWI were younger (11.4 ± 2.1 vs. 12.5 ± 2.0 years, p p p p  = 0.81) and 1 was found to have a cardiomyopathy. Conclusions Anterior TWI is common in children and generally becomes positive by the age of 14 years. Conversely, infero-lateral TWI is rare, persistent and may be associated with structural heart disease. Therefore, infero-lateral TWI should not be interpreted as physiologically related to age, development or training and children with infero-lateral TWI should remain under strict clinical surveillance.
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