List of works
Abstract
Published 10/2025
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 57, 10 Supplement, 116
ACSM Annual Meeting, 2025
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Inter-rater agreement on ECG interpretation among a cardiologist, an expert reader
Published 02/01/2025
Journal of clinical exercise physiology, 14, s1, 2 - 2
Abstract
International Criteria EKG Interpretation Comparison Study
Published 10/2024
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 56, 10 Supplemental, 884
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
International Criteria EKG Comparison Study
Published 02/01/2024
Journal of clinical exercise physiology, 13, s1, 2 - 2
BACKGROUND: There has been an evolution of athlete specific Electrocardiogram (EKG) criteria over the years, resulting in improved specificity and lower false positive rates, starting with the European Society of Cardiology 2005 guidelines and most recently with the current 2017 International Recommendations. The consistency of EKG interpretation with the 2017 International Criteria have been compared between various groups, including local and specialized center physicians. Whether novice EKG interpreters (undergraduate/graduate students) can be taught to accurately interpret athletes’ EKGs with the 2017 International Criteria has not been extensively studied. This study seeks to assess the accuracy and variability of novice EKG interpreters, compared to cardiologist interpretations and expert readers.
METHODS Three novice EKG interpreters (undergraduate exercise science students) were trained in interpreting EKGs of athletes with the 2017 International Criteria during one semester under the instruction of an expert reader. During an annual high school, sports screening day 1350 EKGs were collected and assigned a corresponding number. The on-site cardiologists evaluated the EKGs in real-time and classified as “normal” or “abnormal” according to the International Criteria. Following the sports physical day, three novice EKG interpreters (students), a cardiologist and a Clinical Exercise Physiology Professor (expert reader) were asked separately to classify the same EKGs as “normal or “abnormal” according to the International Criteria. All readers were blinded to the initial classifications made by the cardiologist during the sports physical event. Information regarding the athlete's age, gender, race/ethnicity, and sport was provided on the EKGs. We assessed the agreement between the cardiologist, expert reader and students in interpreting EKGs using Fleiss' kappa analysis.
RESULTS 1350 athlete EKGs (males = 879; females = 471, age (mean + SD) 15.09 + 1.3y) including 37 (2.7%) abnormal cases were reviewed. The inter-rater agreement between novice readers, expert reader, and physicians in classifying an EKG as abnormal was good (k = 0.7, p < .001).
CONCLUSION This study demonstrated that novice EKG readers could correctly classify EKGs based on the International Criteria as “normal and abnormal” to identify athletes at high risk of acute cardiovascular events
Abstract
ECG Characteristics Of Young High School Athletes In Northwest Florida
Published 09/2023
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 55, 9 Supplemental, 141
Abstract
ECG Characteristics of Young High School Athletes in Northwest Florida
Published 2023
International Journal of Exercise Science, 16, 2, 315
American College of Sports Medicine Southeast Chapter Conference, 02/23/2023–02/25/2023, Greenville, South Carolina
Abstract
Published 09/2022
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 54, 9 Suppl., 426
Abstract
Published 08/2021
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 53, 8 Suppl, 437
Abstract
Effects Of The Covid-19 Pandemic On The Fitness Routines Of College Students And Faculty
Published 08/2021
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 53, 8 Supplemental, 66
Abstract
Published 07/2020
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 52, 7 Suppl., 561 - 562