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View Full Version : Study warns of bodybuilding dangers


TigerBoy
November 24th, 2012, 12:37 PM
As this is something I've commented on before I thought I'd throw this one out there : a New York times article (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/19/health/teenage-boys-worried-about-body-image-take-risks.html?adxnnl=1&partner=rss&emc=rss&adxnnlx=1353327035-9z64iecnhWh0fkxHaNNz8A&_r=0) is warning about the dangers of being too focussed on training for muscle mass and vanity.


Pediatricians are starting to sound alarm bells about boys who take unhealthy measures to try to achieve Charles Atlas bodies that only genetics can truly confer. Whether it is long hours in the gym, allowances blown on expensive supplements or even risky experiments with illegal steroids, the price American boys are willing to pay for the perfect body appears to be on the rise.

In a study to be published on Monday in the journal Pediatrics, more than 40 percent of boys in middle school and high school said they regularly exercised with the goal of increasing muscle mass. Thirty-eight percent said they used protein supplements, and nearly 6 percent said they had experimented with steroids.

Over all, 90 percent of the 1,307 boys in the survey — who lived in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, but typify what doctors say is a national phenomenon — said they exercised at least occasionally to add muscle.

“There has been a striking change in attitudes toward male body image in the last 30 years,” said Dr. Harrison Pope, a psychiatry professor at Harvard who studies bodybuilding culture and was not involved in the study. The portrayal of men as fat-free and chiseled “is dramatically more prevalent in society than it was a generation ago,” he said.

While college-age men have long been interested in bodybuilding, pediatricians say they have been surprised to find that now even middle school boys are so absorbed with building muscles. And their youth adds an element of risk.

Just as girls who count every calorie in an effort to be thin may do themselves more harm than good, boys who chase an illusory image of manhood may end up stunting their development, doctors say, particularly when they turn to supplements — or, worse, steroids — to supercharge their results.

“The problem with supplements is they’re not regulated like drugs, so it’s very hard to know what’s in them,” said Dr. Shalender Bhasin, a professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine and chief of endocrinology, diabetes and nutrition at Boston Medical Center. Some contain anabolic steroids, and even high-quality protein supplements might be dangerous in large amounts, or if taken to replace meals, he said. “These things just haven’t been studied very well,” he said.

Anabolic steroids pose a special danger to developing bodies, Dr. Bhasin said. Steroids “stop testosterone production in men,” he said, leading to terrible withdrawal problems when still-growing boys try to stop taking them. Still, the constant association of steroids with elite athletes like Lance Armstrong and Barry Bonds perpetuates the notion that they can be managed successfully.

Online, in bodybuilding forums for teenagers, boys barely out of puberty share weight-lifting regimens and body fat percentages, and judge one another’s progress. On Tumblr and Facebook, teenagers post images of ripped athletes under the heading “fitspo” or “fitspiraton,” which are short for “fitness inspiration.” The tags are spinoffs of “thinspo” and “thinspiration” pictures and videos, which have been banned from many sites for promoting anorexia.

CharlieFinley
November 25th, 2012, 01:47 AM
Back up. Deliberately and profoundly altering a growing body can have consequences??? HOLY SHIT!

SosbanFach
November 25th, 2012, 04:44 PM
Back up. Deliberately and profoundly altering a growing body can have consequences??? HOLY SHIT!

Your sarcasm is noted. My understanding of it however wasn't that, which is a statement of the obvious. I think it was referring rather more to the increasing obsession of modern society, particularly among young people, with body image, and hence the increasing action being taken to 'improve' their perception of their own appearance. The article obviously includes aspects of the detrimental effect of certain supplements, steroids, or excessive working out, but seems to be focussed more upon the increasing take-up of these, at ever-falling ages - that is to say modern attitudes to it, rather than the physical effect in and of itself.

I don't know if that makes sense any more, tired, bleurgh...

CharlieFinley
November 25th, 2012, 09:39 PM
Nah, I agree with you. Im not a fan of bodybuilding.

Sir Suomi
November 25th, 2012, 10:01 PM
Well.... Shit, I'm screwed.

Zenos
November 26th, 2012, 02:23 PM
:yawn: well it's the media shoving the perfect iudea of a body down peoples throats.

Oh just the the record the jay cutlers and ronnie colmens and other pro-bodybuilders are not examples of the perfect body because there is no symmetry nor any proportion.

Proportion in body building would read like these measurements:


http://www.musclememory.com/articles/MrAsizes.html

(note the Mre.America's on the first chart competed before roids ,the only one on the second chat I know of that competed before roids was Harry Johnson seeing as the first roid Dianabol released in the US in the early 1960s which was American bodybuilders first access to roids.