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Winter Sports Tourists at Higher
Risk of Heart Attack
Skiers and other winter sports
tourists who visit the Alps
are at increased risk for heart
attack due to low temperatures,
high altitude and inadequate
conditioning for intense physical
exertion, finds a new study.
The risk is greatest during
the first two days of vacation,
said a research team of cardiologists
at the Medical University of
Innsbruck, Austria, who focused
on winter tourists in the Tyrolean
Alps.
"Every year, millions
of tourists visit the Tyrolean
Alps to participate in a variety
of winter sports, each of which
carries a certain risk of accident
and injury," study senior
author Dr. Bernhard Metzler,
an associate professor of cardiology
at the university, said in a
news release from the European
Society of Cardiology.
"Previously it had been
shown that sudden cardiac death
accounts for a staggering 40
percent of the total fatalities
amongst winter sports tourists
in the Austrian Alps and, of
these, acute [heart attack]
is the leading cause,"
he added.
Metzler and colleagues analyzed
data from 170 patients who suffered
a heart attack during a winter
sports vacation between 2006
and 2010. About 56 percent of
the patients suffered their
heart attack within the first
two days of beginning intense
physical activity, although
just 19 percent had a known
cardiac condition.
Prior to their vacation, more
than half of the patients got
less than the minimum levels
of physical activity recommended
by the European Society of Cardiology.
Altitude may have been a major
factor, the study authors noted.
The patients' heart attacks
occurred at a mean altitude
of 1,350 meters (4,429 feet),
compared to the mean altitude
of 170 meters (557 feet) where
they lived.
The researchers also found
that about 70 percent of the
patients had at least two risk
factors for coronary artery
disease, including smoking,
diabetes or high cholesterol
levels.
People planning winter sports
holidays in the mountains need
to prepare themselves with regular
exercise beforehand, the study
authors suggested. Once at the
resort, they should increase
their level of physical activity
gradually, they added.
The researchers presented their
findings last week at the European
Society of Cardiology Congress,
in Stockholm, Sweden.