Nearly 40 percent of the 296 athletes currently serving suspensions
from international competition because of doping - taking
performance-enhancing drugs - are women, and about half of these
tested positive for androgens, the study team writes in the British
Journal of Sports Medicine.
Some women, though, have naturally high levels of androgens, and
there is controversy as to whether they should be allowed to
compete, the authors note.
“The quantitative relationship between enhanced testosterone levels
and improved athletic performance should be taken into account when
the eligibility of women with hyperandrogenism to compete in the
female category of competition is discussed,” the researchers write.
Dr. Stephane Bermon from the University of the Cote d’Azur in Nice,
France, and the Monaco Institute of Sports Medicine and Surgery and
Dr. Pierre-Yves Garnier from the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF) Health and Science in Monaco
investigated whether androgen levels affected athletic performance
in 1,332 women and 795 men who participated in track and field
events at IAAF World Championships in 2011 and 2013.
Overall, 44 female athletes had elevated free testosterone levels
and 101 male athletes had below-normal free testosterone levels, the
researchers found.
Among the 24 female athletes whose total testosterone levels were
high, nine had naturally elevated levels as a result of a condition
called hyperandrogenic disorder of sex development, another nine
were found to have been doping and six were impossible to classify.
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Higher testosterone levels in female athletes translated into 2.73
percent better performance in 400-meter runs, 2.78 percent better
performance in 400-meter hurdles and 1.78 percent better performance
in 800-meter runs compared to women competitors with normal
testosterone levels.
The difference was most pronounced in the hammer-throw events, where
women with higher testosterone performed 4.53 percent better, and
pole vault, where they did 2.94 percent better.
While these improvements sound tiny, in elite athletes they are
enough to turn also-rans into medalists.
Interestingly, the researchers found no significant difference in
performance when comparing male elite athletes with the highest and
lowest free testosterone levels.
Dr. Bermon did not respond to a request for comments on this
research.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1pEyasi British Journal of Sports Medicine,
online July 3, 2017.
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