AJCN 19th International Congress of Nutrition
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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 56, 705-711, Copyright © 1992 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc


ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS

Dietary patterns, eating behaviors, and bone mineral density in women runners

DB Snead, CC Stubbs, JY Weltman, WS Evans, JD Veldhuis, AD Rogol, CD Teates and A Weltman
Curry School of Education, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.

Although reduced gonadal steroid hormone concentrations appear to play a major role in lower trabecular bone mineral density (BMD) in women with athletic amenorrhea, dietary deficiencies and eating behaviors may also affect BMD in women runners. To investigate this possibility, dietary patterns (7-d records), eating-disorders inventory (EDI), and BMD were examined in nine nonrunning eumenorrheic control (Contl) and 32 women runners classified as eumenorrheic (n = 19, Eumen) and oligo/amenorrheic (a group in which some were oligomenorrheic and some were amenorrheic; Ol/Am, n = 13). Runner groups had similar cardiorespiratory fitness, body composition, and training characteristics. Lumbar spine BMD was lower in the Ol/Am runners (-12%, P less than 0.05) but proximal femur BMD did not differ. Dietary intake and EDI subscale scores were similar among the groups. However, there was an inverse trend between EDI subscale scores for bulimia and ineffectiveness and femoral BMD in the Ol/Am runners (r = -0.62 to - 0.71, P less than 0.05). These results suggest that self-reported dietary intake and/or eating behaviors do not predict reproductive- function alterations in women runners, but eating behaviors may be associated with lower BMD in Ol/Am runners.





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