Int J Sports Med 1995; 16(1): 38-44
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-972961
Orthopedics and Clinical Science

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Echocardiographic Size of Conductance Vessels in Athletes and Sedentary People

P. Zeppilli, R. Vannicelli, C. Santini, A. Dello Russo, C. Picani, V. Pulmieri, S. Cameli, R. Corsetti, L. Pietrangeli
  • Centro Studi di Medicina dello Sport, Istituto di Clinica Medica, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
09 March 2007 (online)

The purpose of the present study was to assess the size of great and medium caliber arterial and venous vessels (conductance vessels) in athletes of different sports and sedentary people. Vessel size was measured by two-dimensional echocardiography in 15 professional cyclists, 15 highly-trained long-distance runners, 15 professional volleyball players, 10 wheelchair basketball players, 11 wheelchair distance runners and 20 sedentary controls. The following vessels were imaged and measured: aortic arch, left carotid and left subclavian artery, right pulmonary artery, abdominal aorta and mesenteric artery, superior and inferior vena cava. Vessel size was considered in absolute value and normalized for body surface area (BSA). Among the able-bodied athletes, both cyclists and long-distance runners showed a generalized increase in vessels size in respect to controls, either absolute or normalized for BSA. The increase was highly significant for normalized inferior vena cava: cyclists, mean 15.1 mm, 95 % confidence intervals 14.2 to 15.8 mm; long-distance runners, 15.8mm, 15.3 to 16.4; controls, 10.5mm, 9.8 to 11.3. Volleyball players also showed larger vessels than controls, but this feature was clearly related to their greater body size because statistical differences were attenuated or abolished by normalization for BSA. Wheelchair athletes exhibited significantly larger upper-body vessels but significantly smaller lower-body vessels than controls when normalized for BSA. In addition, wheelchair distance runners, who trained more intensively, had larger abdominal aorta and inferior vena cava than wheelchair basket players. Long-term endurance training leads to a generalized increase in arterial and venous conductance vessels size. The pattern observed in wheelchair athletes indicates that this process needs the integrity of vasomotor control and most likely the presence of the other training-induced changes in skeletal muscle vascularization.

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