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Teens Want To Bulk Up
Nearly a third of adolescent
and pre-adolescent boys and girls frequently think about becoming
more toned and more muscular, a new study suggests.
The research reveals that while boys may not be as prone as
girls to becoming obsessed with weight loss, they are nonetheless
similarly vulnerable to developing a different -- and just as
serious -- form of body dissatisfaction.
The authors found that, for a small percentage of both boys
and girls, this particular body-image issue centers around muscle
mass -- leading to the use of poorly understood over-the-counter
products such as creatine, growth hormone and protein supplements
to enhance performance, strength and muscle definition.
"We tend to think of weight concerns as a female issue, and
we tell parents to intervene early if their daughters are overly
concerned about their weight," said study author Alison E. Field,
an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School who also works
in the division of adolescent medicine at Children's Hospital
in Boston. "But boys -- and surprisingly girls as well -- can
sometimes have a different weight concern that is not about being
thinner or about being fat, but are about a desire to have a
more toned body and more defined muscles."
In the August issue of Pediatrics , Field and her colleagues
report on their work analyzing data that had been collected between
1996 and 1999 concerning physical activity habits, weight concerns
and media exposure among more than 10,000 boys and girls drawn
from across the United States.
At the start of the study, all the children were between the
ages of 9 and 14, most were white, and all were the sons and
daughters of working nurses.
Over the course of the three-year study period, all the kids
were repeatedly asked about their activity routines, body dissatisfaction,
and their use of six specific products they may have used to
improve their physical appearance, including protein powders
and shakes, creatine, amino acid supplements such as hydroxy
methylbutyrate (HMB), the steroid hormone DHEA, growth hormone,
and anabolic and injectable steroids.
The boys and girls also indicated how much and what kind of
TV they watched each week, and which types of magazines they
most often read.
Exploring the potential for media to engender body dissatisfaction,
Field and her team found that boys were more likely than girls
to watch TV, and to watch sports.
The vast majority of both sexes read magazines -- although the
girls tended to read women's, teen, fashion and health/fitness
publications, while the boys were much more likely to read sports-related
glossies.
The authors found that those girls who did read sports magazines
were more likely to use body-enhancing products, as were boys
who read men's magazines. The researchers did not, however, find
a similar association between TV-viewing habits and the use of
such products. Nevertheless, 4 percent of the boys said they
went to great strides to look like men and boys they saw in the
media, whether on TV or in the movies or magazines.
In terms of actual physical condition, the researchers found
that while 23 percent of the boys were either already overweight
or at risk for being overweight, only 15 percent of the girls
had a similar problem.
Perceptions about body image did not follow the reality, however
-- with body dissatisfaction numbers reversed. About 47 percent
of the girls revealed body image concerns, compared to 36 percent
of the boys. As for wanting more toned or defined muscles, 33
percent of girls and 30 percent of boys were found to be thinking
often about the issue.
To this end, girls were more likely than boys to try to shed
pounds -- while boys, by contrast, were engaged in efforts to
pack them on.
Protein powder or shakes were the most commonly consumed products
used to improve appearance, muscle mass, or strength among both
boys and girls.
All told, 8 percent of girls and 10 percent of boys said they
had used a protein powder/shake in the prior year -- although
less than 4 percent of either group had consumed the product
frequently. Creatine was used by 4 percent of boys and less than
1 percent of girls, while weekly use of any product was nearly
three times more common among boys than girls (5 percent compared
with 2 percent).
Field and her team emphasized that it remains unclear whether
media-exposure habits are the trigger for, or the reflection
of, adolescent body image issues.
But they concluded that the issues themselves -- whether losing
weight or increasing muscle mass -- are real and potentially
harmful to a significant number of both girls and boys. The frequent
use of body-enhancement products, however, remains relatively
rare, they noted -- more commonly involving boys than girls.
"Whatever the story, there's really no disadvantage to making
young people more aware of what they're seeing," said Field. "It's
wonderful if they want to be more physically active, but we don't
want them aspiring to looks that are not achievable because it's
a downward spiral from trying healthy methods to get there to
using less and less healthy means to achieve the goal."
Cynthia Sass, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association,
said the kind of body-enhancing supplementation reviewed in the
study is exactly the kind of unhealthy tool for achieving muscle
growth that needs to be discouraged among adolescents.
"My concern would be that the use of products like those is
very widespread, and I'm surprised the numbers in the study aren't
even higher," said Sass. "Supplements are easier to get now.
You can buy them at grocery stores and corner stores, and some
you can get at gas stations, and I have concerns about the use
of these products among kids who aren't fully developed yet."
Sass said that if her own work with boys, in particular, is
any indication, dangerous supplement use will continue to rise
so long as body-image issues proliferate.
"I work with children, teens and college students, and I do
see body image disturbances in very young boys who are very concerned
about bulging muscles and being big," she said. "Halloween costumes
for boys now have ripped abs and huge pecs, and biceps that are
actually sewn into the pads of the costumes. This has an effect
over time, and I think the manufacturers of products like those
in the study are probably aware of this. So these products are
going to be more and more in demand."
For more on body image and eating disorders, check out the National
Eating Disorders Association .
SOURCES: Alison E. Field, assistant professor, Harvard Medical
School, and division of adolescent medicine, department of medicine,
Children's Hospital, Boston; Cynthia Sass, R.D., Tampa, Fla.,
and spokeswoman, American Dietetic Association; August 2005, Pediatrics
Reference
Source 62
August
1,
2005
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