ELİT KADIN SPORCULARDA YEDİLİ RAGBİNİN KARDİYAK BİYOBELİRTEÇLER ÜZERİNE ETKİSİ

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Date
2025Author
Aksöz, Berke
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Rugby is a sport characterized by high-intensity anaerobic
interval runs alongside aerobic exertion. During matches, sudden accelerations,
intense isometric contractions due to pushing and pulling, and heavy physical contact
require players to exert maximum strength throughout the game. Consequently, rugby
matches are known to increase serum levels of CK and Mb. Although these increases
are often attributed to skeletal muscle damage, these markers can also rise as a result
of myocardial injury. Sports with high levels of isometric contractions can lead to
concentric left ventricular hypertrophy due to increased systemic arterial pressure. In
this context, rugby is thought to impose significant cardiac stress, making it essential
to investigate its effects on cardiac damage biomarkers. This study aims to determine
whether rugby sevens, an Olympic sport played in three matches a day, induces cardiac
damage. A total of 28 licensed female rugby players participating in the Turkey Rugby
Sevens Championship were included. Blood samples were collected twice: before
warm-up exercises and at the end of the championship. Serum levels of hs-cTnI, NTproBNP, BNP, CK-MB, Mb, and hs-CRP were analyzed using immunoassay methods.
At the end of the championship, significant increases were observed in all cardiac
biomarkers (hs-cTnI, p<0.001; NT-proBNP, p<0.001; BNP, p<0.01; CK-MB,
p<0.001; Mb, p<0.001; and hs-CRP, p<0.001). Post-championship, CK-MB, and Mb
concentrations exceeded reference limits in 12 and 23 players, respectively, while
increases in other biomarkers remained within reference ranges. A positive correlation
was found between the duration of physical activity and the increases in Mb and CKMB levels (r=0.659, p<0.001; r=0.663, p<0.001, respectively). Considering that Mb
and CK-MB can also increase due to skeletal muscle damage, these findings suggest
that rugby sevens does not cause cardiac damage.