Department of Exercise and Sport Science, Department of Nutrition, Gilling's School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2020 Jan 31;11:11. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00011. eCollection 2020.
For decades researchers have reported men who engaged in intensive exercise training can develop low resting testosterone levels, alterations in their hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, and display hypogonadism. Recently there is renewed interest in this topic since the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Medical Commission coined the term "Relative Energy Deficiency in Sports" (RED-S) as clinical terminology to address both the female-male occurrences of reproductive system health disruptions associated with exercise. This IOC Commission action attempted to move beyond the sex-specific terminology of the "Female Athlete Triad" (Triad) and heighten awareness/realization that some athletic men do have reproductive related physiologic disturbances such as lowered sex hormone levels, HPG regulatory axis alterations, and low bone mineral density similar to Triad women. There are elements in the development and symptomology of exercise-related male hypogonadism that mirror closely that of women experiencing the Triad/RED-S, but evidence also exists that dissimilarities exist between the sexes on this issue. Our research group postulates that the inconsistency and differences in the male findings in relation to women with Triad/RED-S are not just due to sex dimorphism, but that there are varying forms of exercise-related reproductive disruptions existing in athletic men resulting in them displaying a relative hypogonadism condition. Specifically, such conditions in men may derive acutely and be associated with low energy availability (Triad/RED-S) or excessive training load (overtraining) and appear transient in nature, and resolve with appropriate clinical interventions. However, manifestations of a more chronic based hypogonadism that persists on a more permanent basis (years) exist and is termed the "Exercise Hypogonadal Male Condition." This article presents an up-to-date overview of the various types of acute and chronic relative hypogonadism found in athletic, exercising men and proposes mechanistic models of how these various forms of exercise relative hypogonadism develop.
几十年来,研究人员报告称,进行高强度锻炼训练的男性会出现静息睾酮水平降低、下丘脑-垂体-性腺(HPG)轴改变,并表现出性腺功能减退症。最近,人们对这个话题重新产生了兴趣,因为国际奥林匹克委员会(IOC)医学委员会创造了“运动相关能量不足”(RED-S)一词作为临床术语,以解决与运动相关的生殖系统健康紊乱在男性和女性中的发生。国际奥委会委员会的这一行动试图超越“女性运动员三联征”(三联征)的性别特定术语,并提高对某些运动男性确实存在生殖相关生理紊乱的认识/意识,例如降低性激素水平、HPG 调节轴改变和低骨矿物质密度,类似于三联征女性。运动相关男性性腺功能减退症的发展和症状与经历三联征/RED-S 的女性非常相似,但也有证据表明,在这个问题上男女之间存在差异。我们的研究小组假设,与经历三联征/RED-S 的女性相比,男性在研究中的不一致和差异不仅仅是由于性别二态性,而是在运动男性中存在不同形式的与运动相关的生殖紊乱,导致他们表现出相对性腺功能减退症的状况。具体来说,男性的这种情况可能是急性的,并与能量供应不足(三联征/RED-S)或过度训练负荷(过度训练)相关,表现为短暂的性质,并通过适当的临床干预得到解决。然而,存在一种更慢性的基础性腺功能减退症,它在更长期的基础上持续存在(数年),并被称为“运动性性腺功能减退男性状况”。本文介绍了在竞技和运动男性中发现的各种急性和慢性相对性腺功能减退症的最新概述,并提出了这些各种形式的运动相关相对性腺功能减退症发展的机制模型。