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Enlarged Ventricle?

I believe liftsiron is on track. Athletes heart is a normal condition of heart hypertrophy experienced by athletes. Many doctors don't know a thing about it and may mistake the condition as a problem when it is not.

If the doctors were not concerned then the hypertrophy is not outside of acceptable parameters. If it makes you feel better, set up an annual or bi-annual test to keep track of the enlargement.
 
Okay guys listen up:

Athletic heart syndrome does not occur in weight liter, it is a result of chronic cardiovascular training and only occurs in a small percentage of very highly trained athletes. Secondly, athlete’s heart or athletic heart syndrome is not a mechanism of the ventricles but has to do with the SA-Node, your hearts pacemaker. This results in a 2nd degree heart block which is normal adaptation if you are a highly endurance trained athlete.

A LV enlargement or hypertrophy occurs in most CV and power trained athletes and is very, very normal. Your heart is a muscle and adapts to training like all the others. The enlarged LV is good, very good and means your heart is stronger and EF increases meaning your heart fatigues less!
 
stryker1992 said:
Okay guys listen up:

Athletic heart syndrome does not occur in weight liter, it is a result of chronic cardiovascular training and only occurs in a small percentage of very highly trained athletes. Secondly, athlete’s heart or athletic heart syndrome is not a mechanism of the ventricles but has to do with the SA-Node, your hearts pacemaker. This results in a 2nd degree heart block which is normal adaptation if you are a highly endurance trained athlete.

A LV enlargement or hypertrophy occurs in most CV and power trained athletes and is very, very normal. Your heart is a muscle and adapts to training like all the others. The enlarged LV is good, very good and means your heart is stronger and EF increases meaning your heart fatigues less!
Weight lifters are not power trained athletes?

Dig a little deeper. Athlete’s heart is common in weight training athletes who engage in moderate to high intensity resistance work.

With weight training the most obvious adaptation seen is an increase ventricular wall thickness. In endurance (read cardio) athletes an increase in wall thickness is seen, but additional characteristics include an increase in LV stroke volume (correlated with physical chamber enlargement) and both LV and RV end diastolic diameters are greater.
 
yes

It has been known to enlarge the ventricals...They did a study on power lifters hearts and almost all of them have enlarged heart...I was gonna be a cardiologist,,Dont worry as long as it was from lifting u will be fine...I have a valve problem with my heart and roids never bother it...
 
Had a stress test myself not long ago for a discovery made from a CAT scan. My superior vena cava was pinched, not closed, but nearly. It turns out to have been a congenital defect. The superior vena cave is mainly to drain the blood from the upper part of the body. The vascular surgeon said that my azygous vein, that is present on the right side of the posterior thorax and abdomen was handling the drainage. Some times this is refered to a seconday circular sysyem. It is formed by the confluence of the right ascending lumbar vein with the right subcostal vein. Also, it is connected to the inferior vena cava by what is usually a fibrous remnant: this represents the caudal section of the developmental right posterior cardinal vein.

But I digress...

Enlargement of the LV is not uncommon in athletes, even those who do not use steroids. The big deal is if you have any back flow in the heart valves and the output from the heart that involves pumping efficiency.

:garza:
 
40butpumpin said:
based on my research, liftsiron and Silent Method are both on the money (as usual).
LOL, my "research" is based on a physiologist I work with here at school that did some of the early introductory research on athletes heart.
 
I hear you bro, I have this myself so of course I've researched the hell out of it (and I'll be 43 in a few months and I train like nobody's business). :D
 
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