knapplc
Active member
Editing this because this is turning out to be a way more complicated thing that Mr. Sebastianelli's statement seems to say. Read below for updates.
Original post:
Well, this certainly isn't going to move the needle in the "let them play" direction.
EDITS FOLLOW WITH NEW INFORMATION
This was posted later in the thread, but I'm editing this one because it's pertinent as a response to this post.
So there you go. Have fun with all that! :LOLtartar
Original post:
Well, this certainly isn't going to move the needle in the "let them play" direction.
PSU football doctor: 30-35 percent of COVID-19-positive Big Ten athletes had myocarditis
New data helps illustrate what Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren might have meant when he described “too much medical uncertainty and too many unknown health risks” as reasons for postponing the Big Ten’s 2020-21 fall sports season.
During a State College Area school board of directors meeting on Monday night, Wayne Sebastianelli — Penn State’s director of athletic medicine — made some alarming comments about the link between COVID-19 and myocarditis, particularly in Big Ten athletes. Sebastianelli said that cardiac MRI scans revealed that approximately a third of Big Ten athletes who tested positive for COVID-19 appeared to have myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle that can be fatal if left unchecked.
“When we looked at our COVID-positive athletes, whether they were symptomatic or not, 30 to roughly 35 percent of their heart muscles (are) inflamed,” Sebastianelli said. “And we really just don’t know what to do with it right now. It’s still very early in the infection. Some of that has led to the Pac-12 and the Big Ten’s decision to sort of put a hiatus on what’s happening.”
A day before the Big Ten announced its decision to postpone its fall sports season on Aug. 11, ESPN reported that the long-term effects of myocarditis had been discussed in meetings of presidents and chancellors, commissioners and athletic directors, and health advisory board members from the Big Ten and other conferences around the country.
“You could have a very high-level athlete who’s got a very superior VO2 max and cardiac output who gets infected with COVID and can drop his or her VO2 max and cardiac output just by 10 percent, and that could make them go from elite status to average status,” Sebastianelli said. “We don’t know that. We don’t know how long that’s going to last. What we have seen is when people have been studied with cardiac MRI scans — symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID infections — is a level of inflammation in cardiac muscle that just is alarming.”
EDITS FOLLOW WITH NEW INFORMATION
Source: No NFL players have had post-COVID heart ailment
No NFL player who has had COVID-19 has been diagnosed with myocarditis, a league source says.
The heart disease causes potentially life-threatening inflammation of heart tissue.
It was diagnosed in 10 or more football players at Big Ten universities, according to TheAthletic.com and other national U.S. sports-news outlets earlier this month.
Reports at that time cited a deep concern about myocarditis as a principal medical reason the Big Ten — one of the foremost U.S. college sports leagues — cancelled all fall sports.
Just on Friday, however, multiple reports said the Big Ten was seriously reconsidering that decision, at least for football. Leaders were said to be mulling a 2020-21 football season for winter instead of fall, beginning as early as late November.
This was posted later in the thread, but I'm editing this one because it's pertinent as a response to this post.
FootballScoop:
Myocarditis: Speaking at an area Board of School directors meeting on August 31st, Penn State director of athletic medicine Wayne Sebastianelli made a comment that of athletes who have tested positive for Covid “30 to roughly 35% of their heart muscles are inflamed.” FootballScoop reached out to contacts at 8 Big Ten schools (including Penn State). 7 have responded so far (not including Penn State), all 6 have said something along the lines of “We’re not experiencing that here and haven’t heard of anyone in the conference experiencing this. Last we heard was nearly 10 total athletes across all sports.” Update> ESPN has released information today saying, “Of the 26 schools (all Power 5) that answered the question about heart-related conditions for student-athletes, only one school — Oregon State — reported having an athlete who developed heart-related issues after contracting COVID-19, but the school stated it was not myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle.”
So there you go. Have fun with all that! :LOLtartar
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