Cardiac MRI confirmed acute myocarditis in a collapsed marathon runner, which fully resolved at three months following supportive non-NSAID management and temporary abstinence from sports.
21-year-old male recreational marathon runner presenting with collapse and markedly elevated cardiac and muscle biomarkers
Supportive management (intravenous fluids, non-NSAID analgesics) and temporary abstinence from competitive sports
Resolution of myocardial inflammation and functional recovery
This case highlights the diagnostic utility of cardiac MRI and the effectiveness of guideline-based management, including temporary sports abstinence, for acute myocarditis in endurance athletes.
Abstract Background Marathon running is associated with transient elevations in cardiac and skeletal muscle biomarkers, which generally normalize within 72 hours. However, persistent or extreme biomarker elevations may indicate underlying pathology, such as myocarditis. Early recognition and guideline-based management are essential to prevent complications and guide safe return to exercise. Case Summary A 21-year-old recreational marathon runner collapsed toward the end of a marathon race. On presentation, he exhibited markedly elevated cardiac and muscle biomarkers, including high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT), creatine kinase (CK), creatine kinase–myocardial band (CK-MB), and myoglobin. The initial ECG demonstrated a tachycardic sinus rhythm with T-wave inversion in lead III, without evidence of significant depolarization or repolarization abnormalities. Cardiac MRI confirmed acute myocarditis. The patient was managed supportively with intravenous fluids and non-NSAID analgesics, remained hemodynamically stable, and experienced no arrhythmias or chest pain. At three-month follow-up, he reported good functional capacity, and both echocardiography and cardiac MRI were completely normal, demonstrating full resolution of myocardial inflammation. Discussion This case highlights the diagnostic challenge of interpreting elevated cardiac biomarkers in endurance athletes. Observational studies indicate that biomarker elevations often correlate with exercise duration rather than with demographic or training-related factors. Cardiac MRI remains essential for non-invasive diagnosis, risk stratification, and follow-up. Importantly, adherence to guideline-based management, i.e. temporary abstinence from competitive sports, monitoring of biomarkers, and serial imaging can lead to excellent outcomes, as exemplified by the complete normalization observed in this patient. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) should be used with caution in amateur endurance athletes due to their potential to aggravate myocarditis.
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Lisa Marie Dertinger
Frank Ruschitzka
Jan Kleeberger
European Heart Journal - Case Reports
University of Zurich
University Hospital of Zurich
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Dertinger et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Cardiac MRI confirmed acute myocarditis in a collapsed marathon runner, which fully resolved at three months following supportive non-NSAID management and temporary abstinence from sports.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c7725e8bbfbc51511e2db7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjcr/ytag245