Those rare but often highly publicized events offer an opportunity to deliver a nuanced message about heart health to active people: Exercise is good, but nothing is 100 percent protective, says Aaron Baggish, director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
Even doctors often overlook the potential for heart problems when they see athletic patients.
"No amount of exercise confers complete immunity to heart disease," Baggish says. "You can't outrun heart problems completely."
Decades of research on tens of thousands of people have drawn a direct connection between routine exercise and heart health. Among other measures, studies show, getting the recommended 150 minutes of moderate exercise each week can lower rates of blood pressure, heart disease, death and more.
"If you had to pick one pill for the American public to take, exercise is more perfect than any other pill you could come up with," says Mark Link, a cardiac electrophysiologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
But reducing risk isn't the same as eliminating it. Sometimes exercise can exacerbate heart risks, especially at extreme levels - although scientists are still working out the details of what an athlete's heart should look like.
In one 2013 study, researchers looked at the health records of more than 52,000 Swedish cross-country skiers who competed in a 56-mile race between 1989 and 1998. They found that male athletes who had skied faster and those who had competed in more races showed higher rates of irregular heart rhythms, called arrhythmias, over a period of 10 years.
Compared with men who had competed just once, those who completed five races were twice as likely to be hospitalized for bradyarrhythmias, or unusually slow heart rates. Atrial fibrillation, an irregular or very fast heart rate, was also more common in the most-serious skiers.
But overall, the athletes reaped plenty of benefits. Rates of death were lower in skiers who did more races compared with those who did fewer. Mortality rates were lower in the skiers compared with the general population.
This is not the only example where evidence is revealing that vigorous training alters hearts in ways that require more research. For example, serious athletes seem to show increased levels of calcium deposits in the arteries of the heart. These plaques are normally a sign of elevated risk for heart attacks, but new studies suggest that they may be less worrisome in otherwise healthy athletes. "To some degree," Baggish says, "the jury is still out on this."
A more common risk that active people face is the belief that exercise gives them freedom to indulge in heart-damaging behaviors. And excessive alcohol, junk food and tobacco in early adulthood can catch up to people later in life, Baggish says.
Genetic predispositions also matter, even for people who do everything right. That's something that Jay Kuo, a
49-year-old Broadway composer and producer in New York, has been struggling with since his blood pressure and triglycerides spiked a couple of years ago, despite his healthy habits.
Already spooked by a family history of heart disease, including the death of his father at age 44, Kuo had stopped smoking, reduced his salt intake, cut out processed meats and started drinking a kale smoothie every morning. He also jogs, does yoga, meditates and takes medications to improve his blood pressure and triglyceride levels. Despite all that, he's not making as much progress as he'd like.
"It's frustrating," he says. "I need to not have what happened to my dad happen to me."
Screening for heart conditions remains controversial, as researchers continue to debate whether looking for trouble would wind up harming more people than it might help.
Doctors also want to be careful not to scare people away from exercise, even the endurance kind. In a 2012 study, Baggish and colleagues looked at a database that included 10.9 million people who registered to run marathons or half-marathons between 2000 and 2010.
Overall, they found 59 cases of cardiac arrest (42 of them fatal) that happened during the race or at the finish line - suggesting that exercise-induced sudden death is quite rare, even though tragic cases get a lot of attention.
Most of the runners who survived a cardiac arrest said they had had some kind of symptoms before the event, such as chest discomfort or trouble breathing. And while the risk of cardiac arrest rises during exercise or bursts of activity, like snow shoveling, that risk is largest among people who don't exercise regularly.
See a doctor if you have concerns, Baggish suggests. But don't let stories of athletes with heart problems scare you away from exercise.
"Our country's problem is not too much exercise," he says. "It's too little exercise."
And a diagnosis doesn't have to mean the end of an athletic lifestyle. Two years after his heart surgery, Lathrop is running three days a week, often for 10 miles or more at a time.
"I'm running much farther than I ever did before the surgery," he says. "I have a new lease on life."