Petroczi Andrea, Naughton Declan P
Kingston University, School of Life Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT1 2EE, UK.
J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2008 Jan 10;5:2. doi: 10.1186/1550-2783-5-2.
Owing to the mechanics of anti-doping regulation via the World Anti-Doping Agency's Prohibited List, nutritional supplement use received little attention in comparison to the prevalence of doping. The aims of this study were to investigate supplement use, identify groups of athletes with high levels of supplement use and the prevalence of concomitant use of supplements.
Survey data from 847 high-performing athletes in the UK were analysed using descriptive statistics. The survey, conducted by UK Sport, consisted of questions regarding knowledge of the prohibited substances, testing procedure, nutritional supplement use and perceptions of the doping problem. The proportion of supplement users and the relative use of each supplement were compared by age, gender and professional status.
Among 874 high-performing athletes in the UK sample, 58.8% of them reported the use of at least one nutritional supplement. Among supplement users, 82.6% used more than one and 11.5% reported use of more than five nutritional supplements. Of the 9 supplements listed, multivitamins (72.6%) and vitamin C (70.7%) were used most, followed by creatine (36.1%), whey protein (31.7%), echinacea (30.9%), iron (29.9%) and caffeine (23.7%). Less than 11% reported the use of magnesium or ginseng. Creatine use was typically associated with males regardless of status and across all ages, whereas iron was characteristically used by females. A 'typical' supplement user is male, between 24 and 29 years of age, involved in professional sport and using a combination of supplements. Male professional players between age 30 and 34 years, and female non-professional athletes between 24 and 29 years of age also represented a considerable proportion of supplement users. Athletes older than 40 years of age were practically non-users. Concomitant use of supplements is characteristic of male users more than females.
As supplement use has been previously shown to increase the probability of prohibited substance use, groups exhibiting high use of nutritional supplements should be monitored. Future research should incorporate a wide range of supplements and enquire about the daily amount ingested. In addition to tutoring, preventive measures should incorporate offering acceptable and healthy alternatives for assisted performance enhancement.
由于世界反兴奋剂机构《禁用清单》中反兴奋剂监管的机制,与兴奋剂的普遍使用情况相比,营养补充剂的使用很少受到关注。本研究的目的是调查营养补充剂的使用情况,确定营养补充剂高使用水平的运动员群体以及营养补充剂同时使用的流行情况。
使用描述性统计分析来自英国847名高水平运动员的调查数据。由英国体育组织进行的这项调查包括关于禁用物质知识、检测程序、营养补充剂使用情况以及对兴奋剂问题看法的问题。按年龄、性别和职业状况比较了营养补充剂使用者的比例和每种营养补充剂的相对使用情况。
在英国样本中的874名高水平运动员中,58.8%的人报告使用了至少一种营养补充剂。在营养补充剂使用者中,82.6%的人使用了不止一种,11.5%的人报告使用了五种以上的营养补充剂。在所列出的9种补充剂中,多种维生素(72.6%)和维生素C(70.7%)使用最为普遍,其次是肌酸(36.1%)、乳清蛋白(31.7%)、紫锥菊(30.9%)、铁(29.9%)和咖啡因(23.7%)。不到11%的人报告使用镁或人参。无论身份和年龄如何,肌酸的使用通常与男性相关,而铁的使用则典型地为女性。一个“典型”的营养补充剂使用者是男性,年龄在24至29岁之间,从事职业运动并同时使用多种营养补充剂。30至34岁的男性职业运动员以及24至29岁的女性非职业运动员在营养补充剂使用者中也占相当大的比例。40岁以上的运动员实际上不使用营养补充剂。营养补充剂的同时使用在男性使用者中比女性更为常见。
由于先前已表明营养补充剂的使用会增加使用禁用物质的可能性,因此应对营养补充剂高使用水平的群体进行监测。未来的研究应纳入广泛的营养补充剂,并询问每日摄入量。除了指导外,预防措施应包括提供可接受的健康替代品以辅助提高成绩。