Monday, February 5, 2007

School Says State-Required Defibrillator Saved Studen

By OMAR AQUIJE, oaquije@poststar.com
Monday, February 5, 2007 10:55 PM EST

GLENS FALLS - A 7-year-old student is alive today because of an automatic external defibrillator his school purchased to comply with a 2002 law, making him the first in the Glens Falls City School District to be saved by the device.

Officials at Big Cross Street Elementary School used the AED on Friday to save Adam Chen, whose heart stopped beating during gym class.

An AED determines if a person who is suffering from a heart attack needs an electrical pulse, which restores a normal heart rhythm. EMT crews were still on the way to the school when the AED was used.

The device must be used immediately because the chance of a victim's survival decreases by 10 percent with every minute that passes, according to www.aed.com.

"Had this not been available at the school, he would have died," said Dr. Florence Nolan, who treated Adam when he was taken to Glens Falls Hospital.

He was later transported to Albany Medical Center, where he was still in intensive care Monday.

It is not known how long he will be hospitalized. But if everything goes well, he could be released in a week, Nolan said.

It is unlikely, however, that Adam will be able to play sports, she said.

The AED's memory allowed medical personnel to learn what happened with Adam's heart during the incident -- information that would not show in an autopsy, leaving the death unexplained, Nolan said.

A family spokesman would not comment Monday.

There are two AEDs at each Glens Falls high school and middle school. Each elementary school also has a device.

One of the AEDs -- which cost $2,500 each -- is brought when students go away on trips or road games, and schools are responsible for having one when they host games, said Glens Falls Superintendent Thomas McGowan.

He said the Big Cross staff did a very good job responding to the incident and followed protocol.

"We were very fortunate that we had the machine and everybody did what they had to do," McGowan said.

In 2002, an education law was created requiring each New York school district to have at least one AED in its facilities. Districts also have to ensure that each building has at least one staff person who is trained to use the device.

Nolan said anyone who has a family member who died suddenly and unexpectedly -- without obvious trauma -- should have an EKG to determine if he or she has Long Q-T syndrome, a hereditary disorder of the heart's electrical rhythm that can occur in otherwise healthy people.

© Copyright 2007 Lee Publications, Inc. DBA The Post-Star

Monday, January 29, 2007

Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, Inc. Receives Grant from the Louis J. Acompora Memorial Foundation for Life-Saving Defibrillators

The AED donated through grant
from the Louis J. Acompora
Memorial Foundation
Old Bethpage, NY - January 29, 2007—The Louis J. Acompora Memorial Foundation generously provided a grant to Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, Inc. (FREE) for automated external defibrillators (AEDs). These life-saving devices will enable Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, Inc. to deliver defibrillation if sudden cardiac arrest were to strike any of the hundreds of individuals with disabilities who participate in day programs offered by the agency or its staff. The portable automatic devices will be used at the agency’s programs in Old Bethpage, East Setauket and Middle Island as a precautionary measure to restore a normal heart rhythm to individuals in cardiac arrest. Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, Inc. provides educational, residential and other support services for individuals with special needs.

Barbara Cohen, Assemblyman Andrew Raia, Barbara Townsend-Chief Executive Officer Family Residences and Essential Enterprises Inc., Karen Acompora, John Acompora, Jeff Cohen-Director of Gift Planning National Foundation for Human Potential, Robert Budd-Chief Executive Officer Family Residences and Essential Enterprises Inc.

Friday, January 26, 2007

Doctor, defibrillator bring man back to life after Rye tennis court collapse

RYE, NY (News 12) - 01/26/07 - A White Plains doctor used her medical skills to save a man whose heart stopped while playing tennis in Rye Tuesday night.

Dr. Lisa Youkeles noticed 44-year-old Larry Dubler laying on the ground two courts away at the Rye Racquet Club. Youkeles performed CPR on the unconscious Dubler before using an automated defibrillator to jumpstart his heart. According to Youkeles, if she had waited for the paramedics, Dubler could have sustained irreversible brain damage.

Dubler is recovering at Connecticut Hospital. Defibrillators are required in schools and at school sporting events throughout New York, which was the first state to enact such a measure.

Video: To watch the News 12 news report on this save, click here.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Blow to chest can be fatal in child athletes, study finds

CHICAGO, Illinois (Reuters) -November 13, 2006 - Children who play hockey, football, lacrosse or baseball risk sudden death from a hard blow to the chest even if they are clad in protective gear, researchers said Monday.

Commercially available equipment may not adequately protect young athletes if the chest is hit in a manner that triggers an irregular heartbeat called ventricular fibrillation, according to a study presented at the annual American Heart Association meeting in Chicago.

"If the blow occurs directly over the heart at a particular time in the heart's cycle, the results can be catastrophic," said the report's lead author, Dr. Barry Maron, director of the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Center at the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation.

The heart's electrical activity becomes disordered and its lower chambers contract in a rapid, unsynchronized way, allowing little or no blood to be pumped. Collapse and sudden death can follow unless immediate medical help is provided.

Such a rare but tragic blow can come from a ball, bat, hockey stick, puck or hard contact with another person, according to the study.

Of the 182 cases of ventricular fibrillation tracked by Maron since 1995, 47 percent occurred during practice or competition in organized sports. Thirty-nine percent of the children suffered fatal chest blows despite the presence of protective equipment. Their average age was 15 years.

The remaining 53 percent occurred during recreational sports or normal activities around the home.

Among the athletes were 14 hockey players, 10 football players, six lacrosse players and three baseball catchers. In 23 of the deaths, padding did not cover the chest at the time of the blows, and 10 deaths occurred when projectiles directly struck the chest protector.

The athletes wore standard, commercially available chest barriers made of polymer foam covered by fabric or a hard shell.

Further research conducted at the New England Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, Massachusetts, found ventricular fibrillation could be caused by a baseball moving 30 mph, but only if impact occurred directly over the heart during a 20-millisecond window when the lower heart chambers are relaxed.

The findings indicate a need for better chest protection to make the athletic field safer for young participants, Maron said.

Those involved with youth sports also must be taught to recognize when a child has suffered the potentially deadly heart rhythm -- known as commotio cordis -- so that prompt resuscitation and defibrillation can occur, he said.

"Hopefully, these data will represent a stimulus for developing a truly effective chest barrier that will be absolutely protective against the risk of these commotio cordis catastrophes," he said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Prescreening Young Athletes:

Medical experts recommend ensuring children are healthy enough to play sports

BY ELLEN MITCHELL
Special to Newsday

October 10, 2006

On March 25, 2000, Louis Acompora died on the playing field at Northport High School. He was 14 years old, full of life and playing lacrosse, his favorite sport.

The ball slammed into Louis' chest. It was a routine shot, not at high speed, and Louis was wearing a chest protector. But the impact came in a split second between heartbeats, striking in just such a way as to cause a fatal arrhythmia. The teenager's life and the lacrosse ball collided at precisely the wrong time in the wrong place.

"This was Russian roulette," said Karen Acompora, Louis' mother. "It's disgusting terminology, but that's what it was."

The arrhythmia that killed Acompora's son is called commotio cordis, which translates as commotion of the heart. It is the second leading cause of death in young athletes.

On Sept. 27, 2005, at a Merrick Little League practice, 9-year-old Robbie Levine was running the bases. He had been playing baseball since he was a preschooler. On that fateful day, he collapsed at home plate and died. Robbie's father, Craig, the team manager, tried to revive his son to no avail. Robbie died of some form of cardiac arrhythmia, for which - despite an autopsy and the passage of time - his parents do not yet have a precise name.

Once, several months before his death, Robbie felt dizzy and faint while playing baseball. A pediatric cardiologist did tests and declared Robbie had "the healthiest heart he had ever seen," according to Robbie's mother, Jill.

Could either of these boys still be alive today? In Louis' case, perhaps if a defibrillator had been accessible, his heart could have been shocked back into a regular rhythm, and he might have survived. In Robbie's case, his problem might have been detected earlier if the doctor had performed more tests, in particular a stress test, when Robbie first complained of dizziness while playing ball.

Could more be done?

The tragedies call into question whether enough is being done to screen young athletes and try to identify those who may have heart problems and who could be at risk, and then to provide emergency treatment on the athletic field in the event of a sudden cardiac attack.

According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, of the estimated 10 million to 15 million athletes who participate in organized sports in the United States yearly, fewer than 300 die of sudden cardiac-related causes. Most studies say roughly one high-school-age male per 100,000 and one female per 300,000 suffer sudden cardiac death on the playing field.

Those are very low numbers ... unless it's your child, in which case it's "heartbreak for everyone," said Dr. Russell Schiff, director of pediatric cardiology at Winthrop-University Hospital in Mineola.

Schiff is among physicians who believe not enough is being done in the screening of young athletes. Winthrop is developing a pediatric program that will provide cardiopulmonary stress tests with treadmills and bicycles as well as other testing. The intent is to prevent cardiac deaths and to determine to what level children with known cardiac abnormalities can safely participate in sports.

Writing in the July 2006 issue of Cardiology Review, Dr. Daniel Montellese, a senior cardiology fellow at Stony Brook University Hospital, said most young people who suffer sudden cardiac death on the athletic field show no sign of symptoms or abnormalities before their deaths, and few undergo any form of pretesting to evaluate their risk.

Montellese said guidelines from such groups as the American Heart Association recommend that a family history and physical exam including blood pressure reading be taken, but they do not include an electrocardiogram or echocardiogram (which uses ultrasound), and surely not a stress test prior to allowing a young person to compete in athletics.

By contrast, Montellese said, in 2005 the European Society of Cardiology issued a statement mandating that every young competitive athlete undergo a standard, 12-lead EKG before participating in sports.

Schiff added that in a study done in Italy, which has had a formal national screening program mandating such an EKG since 1982, about 2 percent of would-be athletes were disqualified, and among athletes the rate of sudden deaths had fallen 89 percent since that time.

A disclaimer

However, though experts agree the Italian results are impressive, they say Italy and the United States cannot be compared, because the Italian population is more homogeneous and far smaller.

The American College of Cardiology recently said similar national obligatory screening would be difficult in the United States because of the huge number of young athletes here, the major cost-benefit considerations and the fact that it is impossible to eliminate all risks associated with competitive sports. EKGs can also yield a substantial proportion of false positive test results. The Italian study found a 9 percent rate of false positives. In this country, experts say such false positives could represent a burden to athletes and their families.

The cardiologists interviewed for this article said that although an EKG would not detect all cardiac problems, it could raise suspicion of some potentially fatal conditions. Among them is the most frequent cause of sudden cardiac death in young people, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In this usually genetically transmitted condition, the heart muscle of the left ventricle is abnormally thickened and may obstruct the flow of blood out of the heart.

"In the age group from ninth to 12th grade, I'd say a third to 40 percent of sudden cardiac deaths are from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy," said Dr. Frederick Bierman, chairman of the department of pediatrics at Schneider Children's Hospital in New Hyde Park. Bierman said hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may not always be apparent on an EKG and is usually not detectable by testing before the age of 14. But, he said, after that age an EKG could add information and may help identify the condition.

At Schneider, there is a special program that provides EKG prescreening for young athletes from several high schools in the vicinity. Bierman knows of no other area hospital doing this.

Slipshod requirements

The cardiologists said ideally a physician should do a detailed medical and family history, a general physical exam including an EKG, and an echocardiogram. However, some school districts require nothing more than a cursory medical questionnaire and a brief exam by a school nurse.

Montellese said any prescreening and history taking should involve parents. Asking a 12-year-old if there is any history of cardiac death in his or her family is "laughable," he said.

Dr. Stanley Weindorf of Woodbury Pediatric Associates in Plainview is a general pediatrician who for the past year and a half has been performing EKGs on all teenage athletes in his practice. He said no school districts request that he do so. "You have to realize a lot of coaches are just thinking of getting their kids fit to play in the game. They're not thinking of any medical consequences," Weindorf said.

However, the National Athletic Trainers Association, which represents some 30,000 members, just this year developed guidelines on dealing with sudden cardiac arrest during high school and college athletic practices and competitions. They recommend that all schools have an emergency action plan, with a defibrillator and a first responder trained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation on site. The association, however, does not have any formal recommendations on prescreening for high school students, according to representative Robin Waxenberg.

Weindorf, meanwhile, said he is finding "more and more" cardiac conditions, which he refers to pediatric cardiologists. It is "frightening, disconcerting" he said, that EKGs are not mandated for student athletes.

The physicians agreed that the cost of universal testing for so many millions of athletes, and the low numbers of cardiac problems that would be found, are the prime reasons prescreening EKGs are not regularly done in this country.

"Some of the HMOs refuse to reimburse for a routine EKG that is not recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics," Weindorf said. "But we're not talking a lot of money when you think of the repercussions of even one major heart event."

"In the U.S., everything we do deals with cost-benefit analysis, how much it is going to cost, and who'll pay for it," Schiff said. "But if you can save even one life, that can't be disregarded."

Liability issues

Schiff said there also is fear on the part of the medical community. "What if I or someone else performs a test and misses something?" And, he said, he has known parents who "when things are going well" choose to avoid medical tests for children for fear of jeopardizing a possible college sports scholarship.

Bierman questioned who should or should not be screened. "What about the young girl who plays the violin and doesn't pick up a tennis racket? Probably the risk is slightly higher for those who participate in highly competitive sports, but you have sudden death in individuals who are not doing competitive sports. So how do we manage universal screening? That's a difficult question to answer," Bierman said.

Today, the Acompora and Levine families are trying to educate the public that the lives of young, seemingly healthy athletes can be taken suddenly. They are advocates for EKG prescreening and for placement of defibrillators in schools and at athletic events.

The two families are planning to hold an EKG screening session, possibly in January, which will be open to all children, because any child can harbor a silent heart condition.

Because of lobbying efforts through the Louis J. Acompora Memorial Foundation, New York State has Louis' Law. Signed in 2002, the law mandates that public schools have an automated external defibrillator on site and easily accessible at school athletic events. The law further requires that a staff person trained to render emergency aid using the AED be readily available.The AED, as Bierman explained, is not difficult to operate. It has a recording that talks the first responder through the process. Pads are applied to the victim's chest, and the machine takes and interprets an EKG. If there is evidence of a life-threatening rhythm, the device will automatically react and, hopefully, shock the heart back into regular rhythm. On the evening of Oct. 14, the Acompora Foundation is holding a Save-a-Heart Benefit at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury to raise funds for distribution of AEDs. The event will include the raffling off of three 2007 Mercedez-Benz sedans.

At Robbie's 5k Run last April in Merrick, the Levine family raised $35,000 to buy and distribute AEDs. They are now producing a short video, which they will give to Little League chapters throughout Long Island in hopes team leaders will see fit to have AEDs on the playing fields. Levine said most chapters she's contacted in the past have showed little initial interest.

But some chapters have taken the initiative on their own. About five years ago, Joe Heid, president of the Huntington-Tri-Village Little League, first ordered that an AED be available at games.

"We house the defibrillator in the field house," said Andy Terc, safety officer for the chapter. Terc trains all the directors and board members to use the AED, which, he said, "we've never had to use in five years - and, God willing, we never will."

While the Levines and the Acomporas say the public is receptive once they understand the gravity of the problem, and certainly as each tragic death receives mass media attention, sudden cardiac death in a young athlete is, for most people, "one of those things, if you don't think about it, it won't happen," Levine said.

RESOURCES
The Louis J. Acompora Memorial Foundation
631-754-1091

The Robbie Levine Foundation

The National Athletic Trainers' Association
214-637-6282

Information on the AED mandate in New York State public schools

Cardiology Review
July 2006, Vol. 23, No.7

Wednesday, September 6, 2006

Court Sides with Parents in Wrongful Death Suit

16-year-old collapsed in Beall High classroom more than four years ago

Alison Bunting
Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND - (Sept. 6, 2006) - More than four years later, the parents of a 16-year-old Beall High School student who died after she suddenly collapsed in the classroom each were awarded $300,000 Friday in Allegany County Circuit Court.

Cora J. Houdersheldt and David Sines were represented by Cumberland attorneys Jason C. Buckel and S. Ramani Pillai in a jury trial for the civil case presided over by Judge W. Timothy Finan.

Kelly Sines was in science class April 12, 2002, when she got up to turn in a test or quiz and collapsed, according to Greg Smith, then principal at Beall High.

The state medical examiner later named the cause of death as cardiac arrhythmia, a change from the normal rate or control of the heart’s muscle contractions. She was not on drugs and there was no evidence of foul play, according to C3I investigators.

According to previous reports in the Times-News, Smith said an emergency medical technician was on staff and was able to begin working on Sines just after she collapsed. She reportedly collapsed at 1:37 p.m. and members of the crisis response team were in the school by 1:45 p.m.

Buckel and Pillai said in a press release Tuesday that Sines died as a result of negligence by the Allegany County Board of Education.

“At that time, Allegany County schools did not have automated external defibrillators and, as a result, school personnel trained in CPR and in how to use a defibrillator were unable to utilize the only medical device which could have saved Kelly’s life,” according to Buckel and Pillai.

“Significantly, the jury found that a substantial period of time went by from the moment of Kelly’s collapse until school officials notified appropriate emergency medical personnel,” according to the attorneys.

“The delay caused or contributed to Kelly’s death, as Dr. Larry Rhodes, the chief of pediatric cardiology at West Virginia University Hospital testified ...” and ... “that Kelly had a high probability of survival if she had been defibrillated within a 6- to-8-minute window from the time of her collapse,” Buckel and Pillai said.

The Cumberland attorneys noted that the Allegany County school system did not have a legal obligation to provide AEDs in the schools as of April 2002, however, in the 2006 legislative session, the Maryland General Assembly passed a law requiring all school systems in the state to have automated external defibrillators in their school buildings.

The Allegany County Board of Education was represented by Timothy E. Fizer of the Baltimore firm Krause, Fizer, Crogan and Lopez.

Defendants initially included Smith, Beall High School, Superintendent Bill AuMiller and Allegany County.

Alison Bunting can be reached at abunting@times-news.com

Saturday, July 1, 2006

Preventing Sudden Cardiac Arrest in Young Athletes: Are Current Preparticipation Screening Guidelines Appropriate?

Daniel Montellese, MD
July, 2006

The first documented case of sudden cardiac death occurred in 490 BC, when Pheidippides, a Greek soldier who ran from Marathon to Athens to spread the news of his army’s victory over Persia, delivered his message and then collapsed and died. In the modern era, the sudden death of a number of high-profile athletes has raised public interest in this infrequent event. The public perceives young competitive athletes as robust invulnerable members of our society. Their unexpected death often incites heated debate among the public and, more specifically, the medical community on the prevention of sudden cardiac death and the appropriateness of the existing screening guidelines.

The largest available studies estimate the risk of sudden cardiac death among high school and collegiate athletes to be between 1 per 100 000 and 1 per 300 000 each year.1-3 An estimated 50 to 100 cases occur in the United States annually.3,4 Being symptomatic prior to a sudden cardiac death event is more often the exception rather than the rule. These devastating events are frequently the presenting clinical manifestation of an underlying cardiovascular disorder. One of the earliest clinicopathologic studies in young competitive athletes identified structural cardiovascular abnormalities in 28 of 29 athletes, with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy as the most likely etiology of sudden death in 14 of the 29 cases.3 In 1991, a review of prior studies found that the most common etiology of sudden cardiac death in athletes was hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, occurring 24% of the time, followed by coronary anomalies (18%) and myocarditis (12%).5 The remaining cases of sudden cardiac death in athletes relate to other cardiac electrical disorders, such as long QT syndrome and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, or commotio cordis (ventricular arrhythmia induced by blunt chest wall trauma in a structurally normal heart), as well as complications of asthma and substance misuse.4

The American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee developed consensus recommendations and preparticipation screening guidelines in 1996. The purpose of screening is to identify preexisting cardiovascular abnormalities that place athletes at increased risk for sudden cardiac death and to provide medical clearance by means of routine and systematic evaluations. The Committee recommended that a screening history and physical examination be performed on all athletes before participation in high school and collegiate sports. For high school athletes, the screening should be repeated every 2 years, and an interim history should be obtained in the intervening years. For college athletes, a history and blood pressure measurement should be obtained each year after the initial evaluation. The examination process does not currently include the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs) or echocardiography. The question of whether this approach is adequate remains.

In 2005, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) issued a consensus statement recommending that every young competitive athlete undergo cardiovascular screening. As in the United States, the recommended protocol calls for a complete physical examination and personal and family medical history. However, the ESC also mandates a 12-lead ECG, which has not been required in the United States to date. These recommendations are largely based on Italy’s experience, which spans 25 years of mandatory systematic prescreening of athletes. The findings of a study published by Corrado and colleagues in 2005 indicated that the risk of dying of sudden cardiac death among young athletes was 2 1/2 times that of nonathletes.6 The lead author, Domenico Corrado, from the University of Padua, said he believed ECGs could screen as sensitively as echocardiograms, while producing a false-positive rate of about 10%.

Under ESC guidelines, the recommended cardiovascular evaluation should consist of complete personal and family history, physical examination with blood pressure measurement, and 12-lead ECG. The inclusion of a 12-lead ECG represents the additional value of this screening protocol and is based on the fact that the ECG offers the potential to detect, or to raise clinical suspicion of, potentially lethal conditions, including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia, dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome, Lenègre disease, catecholaminergic ventricular tachycardia, short QT syndrome, and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Based on published studies from the United States and Italy, these conditions, including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, account for up to 60% of sudden deaths in young competitive athletes.7,8

The screening of US high school and college athletes, based on medical history and physical examination without ECG, does not adequately identify those cardiovascular abnormalities that increase the athlete’s risk of sudden cardiac death. In 1 retrospective study, only 3% of US-trained athletes who died suddenly of heart disease confirmed on autopsy had been suspected of having cardiovascular abnormalities on the basis of preparticipation screening, and none with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy were previously identified.7 By comparison, the European experience shows that screening is able to identify asymptomatic athletes with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and observation of these athletes during long-term follow-up suggests that withdrawal from competition has the potential to improve their survival.8 Analysis of the Italian data shows that fewer than 25% of young competitive athletes diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy had an abnormal physical examination or positive family history. Thus, the majority of them would have not been identified by a screening protocol without 12-lead ECG.

The European experience has shown that a systematic preparticipation evaluation including 12-lead ECG can be a practical effective tool to identify patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the most common cause of sport-related sudden cardiac death. The American Heart Association current consensus panel states that “cardiovascular screening for young competitive athletes is justifiable and compelling on ethical, legal, and medical grounds.”9 The Italian experience suggests that adding ECG to the process used in the United States may improve the current system, which many feel is inadequate.

A dilemma, however, still remains. How do we implement an effective prescreening process that is realistically applicable in the United States, with its large population, ongoing emphasis on cutting health care costs, and an increasingly litigious atmosphere? The main criticism of the European protocol points toward the 9% false-positive rate (in the targeted population, to identify 1 patient, there would be 1999 false positives). The detractors contend that such a system would prevent “normal healthy” individuals from participating in athletics. Many will argue, however, that this is a small price to pay to prevent the untimely death of a young person in the prime of his or her life.

References
1. Van Camp SP, Bloor CM, Mueller FO, et al. Nontraumatic sports death in high school and college athletes. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1995;279(5):641-647.

2. Ades PA. Preventing sudden death: cardiovascular screening of young athletes. Phys Sportsmed. 1992;20(9):75-89.

3. Ragosta M, Crabtree J, Sturner WQ, et al. Death during recreational exercise in the state of Rhode Island. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1984;16(4):339-342.

4. Basilico FC. Cardiovascular disease in athletes. Am J Sports Med. 1999;27(1):108-121.

5. Maron BJ, Roberts WC, McAllister HA, et al. Sudden death in young athletes. Circulation. 1980;62(2):218-229.

6. Corrado D, Pelliccia A, Bjørnstad HH, et al. Cardiovascular pre-participation screening of young competitive athletes for prevention of sudden death: proposal for a common European protocol: Consensus Statement of the Study Group of Sport Cardiology of the Working Group of Cardiac Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology and the Working Group of Myocardial and Pericardial Diseases of the European Society of Cardiology. Eur Heart J. 2005;26(5):516-524.

7. Maron BJ, Shirani J, Poliac LC, et al. Sudden death in young competitive athletes: clinical, demographic, and pathological profiles. JAMA. 1996;276(18):199-204.

8. Corrado D, Basso C, Schiavon M, et al. Screening for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in young athletes. N Engl J Med. 1998;339(6):364-369.

9. Maron BJ, Thompson PD, Puffer JC, et al. Cardiovascular preparticipation screening of competitive athletes. Circulation. 1996; 94(4):850-856.
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