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Welsh athlete to have heartbeat monitored over two years as part of new study

Pictured: Gethin Davies-Jones with brother Glyn Jones

A Welsh cyclist will take part in a new study funded by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) aimed at understanding how heart scarring impacts athletes.

Gethin Davies-Jones, 55, lives near Caerphilly, and has tragically lost family members to heart problems.

Gethin’s brother Glyn Jones was also 55 when he suddenly collapsed whilst competing at the Tenby Long Course Weekend in 2019. It was discovered that Glyn, who grew up in Brecon, had been living with coronary heart disease, which had been undiagnosed – and sadly, Glyn later passed away in hospital. Gethin’s mum Helen Jones was in her late 40s when she died from a sudden cardiac arrest.

Gethin, a dad-of-one, said: “Losing family members when they were of a young age had a huge impact on me. There are so many conversations and memories I now won’t be able to have with my brother and mum, and their experiences have put my own mortality sharply into focus.

“Cycling is a huge passion of mine – I enjoy competitive time trialling and I’m a beginner triathlete. The sport is great for my mental health and since taking it up I’ve been able to lose 12kg in weight. However, when I get out on my bike, there is always the worry in the back of my mind that what happened to my brother could happen to me.

“That’s why my interest in this study is so immediate and deep, as it will help me understand more about my own heart health. It’s great that the British Heart Foundation is funding this research, as it could really benefit athletes like me.”

The new research will monitor the heartbeats of more than 100 athletes over two years to measure how endurance exercise impacts their heart.

Heart scarring is a key feature of many heart diseases and has a strong association with abnormal heart rhythms, which can cause a life-threatening cardiac arrest.

A previous small study involving male athletes aged over 50, also known as veteran athletes, found that around half of the participants had developed scarring on their heart. It is thought this could be caused by their levels of exercise, as during endurance sports like long-distance running and cycling, the heart must work even harder to pump blood. However, it is still unclear how scarring has developed.

Now, a new £320,000 project at the University of Leeds will see 106 veteran athletes fitted with a small implantable monitor. The devices are around half the size of a biro pen and will be implanted under the skin on the athlete’s chests.

The monitor will measure every single one of their heartbeats over two years, particularly allowing researchers to assess the athletes’ heart rate during and after exercise. Previously, this measurement has been carried out using sensor stickers and fitness trackers, which have not always been accurate.

The athletes will also undergo MRI scans – which will look for signs of scarring and assess heart function – alongside blood and fitness tests.

Overall, the research will aim to understand if heart scarring in athletes is linked to abnormal heart rhythms, and could inform future research around ways to avoid or reduce heart damage in endurance sports.

The research is now underway at the Advanced Imaging Centre at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and is being led by Dr Peter Swoboda, senior lecturer at Leeds University.

Dr Swoboda said: “Exercise is good for the heart, but studies have suggested that people who participate in long term endurance sport could lose the health benefits of exercise – and in some cases, may even be damaging their hearts over time.

“For an athlete, an abnormal heart rhythm can often result in the end of their career, and we are all familiar of the devastating but rare occurrence of sudden death during sport.

“With the implantable monitors set to detect billions of heartbeats, we are going to learn so much through this study, including whether heart scarring is linked to irregular heart rhythms. This could help identify who is most at risk, and some of the lessons we learn could be applied to younger athletes, too.”

Dr Subreena Simrick, Senior Research Advisor at the BHF, added: “Physical activity can reduce the risk of heart and circulatory diseases, helping to control your weight and reduce blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

“This research is looking at how endurance exercise impacts the heart, and whether heart scarring found in some athletes is a factor that leads to potentially dangerous irregular heartbeats. If it is, then this project could pave the way for further research into potential treatments and preventions, allowing athletes of all ages to participate in sport as safely as possible.

“For more than 60 years, the public’s generosity has funded BHF research that has turned ideas that once seemed like ‘science fiction’ into treatments and cures that save lives every day. We urgently need the public’s support to keep our life saving research going, and to discover the treatments and cures of the future.”