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Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise:
February 2005 - Volume 37 - Issue 2 - pp 184-193
Clinical Sciences: Clinically Relevant

The Female Athlete Triad: Are Elite Athletes at Increased Risk?

TORSTVEIT, MONICA KLUNGLAND; SUNDGOT-BORGEN, JORUNN

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Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to examine the percentage of elite athletes and controls at risk of the female athlete triad.

Methods: A detailed questionnaire, which included questions regarding training and/or physical activity patterns, menstrual history, oral contraceptive use, weight history, eating patterns, dietary history, and the Body Dissatisfaction (BD) and Drive for Thinness (DT) subscales of the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI), was prepared. The questionnaire was administered to the total population of female elite athletes in Norway representing the national teams at the junior or senior level, 13-39 yr of age (N = 938) and nonathlete controls in the same age group (N = 900). After exclusion, a total of 669 athletes (88%) and 607 controls (70%) completed the questionnaire satisfactorily.

Results: A higher percentage of controls (69.2%) than athletes (60.4%) was classified as being at risk of the Triad (P < 0.01). A higher percentage of controls than athletes reported use of pathogenic weight-control methods and had high BD subscale scores (P < 0.001). However, more athletes reported menstrual dysfunction and stress fractures compared with controls (P < 0.05). A higher percentage of both athletes competing in leanness sports (70.1%) and the nonathlete control group (69.2%) was classified as being at risk of the Triad compared with athletes competing in nonleanness sports (55.3%) (P < 0.001). Furthermore, a higher percentage of athletes competing in aesthetic sports (66.4%) than ball game sports (52.6%) was classified as being at risk of the Triad (P < 0.001).

Conclusions: More athletes competing in leanness sports and more nonathlete controls were classified as being at risk of the Triad compared with athletes competing in nonleanness sports.

©2005The American College of Sports Medicine

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