Body-building
supplement overuse signals new male eating disorder
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[August 07, 2015] By
Patricia Reaney
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Low-self esteem, poor
body image and a perception of not meeting the modern ideal of
masculinity are driving more men to consume over-the-counter
body-building supplements, constituting what researchers believe is an
emerging eating disorder.
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Supplements such as whey protein, creatine and L-cartinine are used
to improve athletic performance and physique and are sold in grocery
stores, vitamin shops and online.
The products are popular among gym members to increase energy and
build lean tissue mass. But researchers at Alliant International
University in Los Angeles said overuse is increasing and dangerous.
"Men are using the supplements in a way that is risky both to their
physical health and their health in terms of relationships and their
own emotional wellbeing," said Richard Achiro, of the California
School of Professional Psychology at the university. "It is an
expression, or variance, of eating disorder behavior in these men."
Unlike anorexia or bulimia in women, which result from a desire to
be thin, men are aspiring for a physique that is both lean and
muscular, and are using supplements to achieve it.
Achiro said overuse of the products, which are not regulated by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, can cause diarrhea, kidney
disease and renal failure.
"Taken together low self-esteem and gender role conflict, which is
an underlying sense of insecurity about one's masculinity,
contribute more to the overuse of these products than body
dissatisfaction alone," he explained.
Achiro, who presented his research at the American Psychological
Association convention in Toronto on Thursday, found in a study of
nearly 200 men who took supplements in the past month that 29
percent expressed concern about using them.
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Eight percent admitted their doctors told them to cut back or stop
and 40 percent said their use had increased over time.
Achiro said he and his co-author, Peter Theodore, showed
statistically that the excessive use of the supplements was a form
of eating disorder.
"The way in which men's bodies are being objectified by the media is
catching up rapidly to what has been done to women's bodies for
decades," he said.
"It makes sense to believe that as that occurs men's mental health
and emotional issues are going to be expressed more and more in
eating disorder behavior."
(Editing by Mary Milliken)
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