This type of disordered eating typically involves eating more or
differently to gain weight or bulk up, or using supplements or
anabolic steroids to accomplish that effect, researchers note in the
International Journal of Eating Disorders.
Teens with muscularity-related eating disorders may also exercise
excessively or go back and forth between periods of excessive
protein consumption and calorie cutting or restricting carbs and
fats to achieve the body shape they want.
"In moderation, some behaviors such as eating more or different
types of food to build muscle or bulk up may not be 'disordered,'"
said Dr. Jason Nagata, a researcher at the University of California,
San Francisco who led the study.
"However, engaging in muscle-building or bulking behaviors may put
young people at greater risk for developing an eating disorder,"
Nagata said by email.
The researchers followed a nationally-representative sample of
14,891 teens and young adults for seven years starting when they
were 15 years old on average.
By the time these young people were 18 to 24 years old, one in 20
females and more than one in five males had one or more symptoms of
muscularity-related eating disorders.
Left unchecked, these behaviors may escalate to muscle dysmorphia,
characterized by rigid diet, obsessive over-exercising and extreme
preoccupation with physique, the study team writes. In extreme
cases, it can lead to heart failure due to insufficient calories and
overexertion, as well as muscle dysmorphia, which is associated with
social withdrawal and depression.
"Some eating disorders can be challenging to diagnose," Nagata said.
"Unlike anorexia nervosa, which may be easily identified by parents
or pediatricians, disordered eating to increase bulk may masquerade
as healthy habits and because of this, it tends to go unnoticed."
Teen boys and girls who identified as African-American were more
than twice as likely to have muscularity-related eating disorders as
white youth, the study found.
Among all teen boys, exercising to gain weight was tied to at least
twice the risk of muscularity-related eating disorders, while a
self-image of being underweight was associated with 56% higher odds
of this type of problem eating.
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Teen girls who viewed themselves as underweight were more than three
times as likely as girls who didn't feel this way to develop
muscularity-related eating disorders. Excessive exercise among teen
girls was also tied to a more than tripled risk of this type of
disordered eating.
By the end of the study period, 6.9% of boys said they had used
supplements to gain weight or build muscle and 2.8% said they used
anabolic steroids. Just 0.7% of the young women used supplements and
only 0.4% used steroids.
Steroids are illegal and dangerous, with the potential to cause
heart damage, mood swings known as 'roid rage, and a variety of
other health issues. Many supplements that teens may use to bulk up
are also unregulated, and can include a variety of ingredients that
aren't clearly labeled or approved for human consumption.
One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data on what
specific types of supplements or steroids teens used, the authors
note. They also were unable to assess how extreme or frequent
various behaviors associated with muscularity-related eating
disorders might be.
Even so, the results highlight that parents and doctors need to
watch out for eating issues even in youth who aren't losing weight,
said C. Alix Timko, a psychologist at the Eating Disorder Assessment
and Treatment Program at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
"Over-exercise is associated with disordered eating to be leaner
(lose weight) and to gain weight (increase muscle bulk)," Timko, who
wasn't involved in the study, said by email. "Going to the gym or
exercising multiple times a week (or even every day) can be
problematic."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2Lc3Rdn International Journal of Eating
Disorders, online June 20, 2019.
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