Pugh Jamie N, Lydon Katherine M, O'Donovan Ciara M, O'Sullivan Orla, Madigan Sharon M
Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
Department for Health, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2022 May;22(5):755-764. doi: 10.1080/17461391.2021.1921853. Epub 2021 May 20.
As with much of science, the female athlete is under researched, particularly in the area of gastrointestinal (GI) physiology. Gut function is of pivotal importance to athletes in that it supports digestion and absorption of nutrients, as well as providing a barrier between the external environment and the circulation. While sex-derived differences in GI structure and function have been well characterised at rest, there remains a paucity of data examining this during exercise. The wider impact of the GI system has begun to be realised and it is now widely acknowledged to play a role in more systemic bodily systems. In the current review, we discuss localised issues including the GI structure, function, and microbiome of male and females. We also discuss GI-related symptoms experienced by athletes, highlight the differences in incidence between males and females, and discuss contributing factors. We then move beyond the gut to discuss wider biological processes that have been shown to have both sex-related differences and that are impacted by the GI system. Some of these areas include immune function and risk of illness, sleep, hormones, bone health and the gut-brain-axis. The magnitude of such effects and relationships is currently unknown but there is enough mechanistic data for future studies to consider a more central role that the gastrointestinal tract may play in overall female athlete health. HighlightsThere are both clear similarities and differences in male-female gastrointestinal structure and function.Females typically reported a greater prevalence of gastrointestinal symptoms at rest, in particular during menstruation, but not during exercise.The links between female microbiome, oestrogen, and systemic physiological and biological processes are yet to be fully elucidated.Many of the male-female differences seen (e.g. in immune function) may be, at least in part, influenced by such GI related differences.
与许多科学领域一样,女性运动员的相关研究较少,尤其是在胃肠(GI)生理学领域。肠道功能对运动员至关重要,因为它支持营养物质的消化和吸收,并在外部环境与循环系统之间提供屏障。虽然在静息状态下,GI结构和功能的性别差异已得到充分表征,但在运动期间对此进行研究的数据仍然很少。GI系统的更广泛影响已开始得到认识,现在人们普遍认为它在更多的全身身体系统中发挥作用。在当前的综述中,我们讨论了局部问题,包括男性和女性的GI结构、功能和微生物群。我们还讨论了运动员经历的与GI相关的症状,强调了男性和女性在发病率上的差异,并讨论了影响因素。然后,我们超越肠道,讨论已被证明存在性别差异且受GI系统影响的更广泛的生物学过程。其中一些领域包括免疫功能、患病风险、睡眠、激素、骨骼健康和肠脑轴。目前尚不清楚这些影响和关系的程度,但有足够的机制数据供未来研究考虑胃肠道在女性运动员整体健康中可能发挥的更核心作用。要点男性和女性的胃肠结构和功能既有明显的相似之处,也有差异。女性通常报告在静息状态下,尤其是在月经期间,胃肠道症状的发生率较高,但在运动期间并非如此。女性微生物群、雌激素与全身生理和生物学过程之间的联系尚未完全阐明。所观察到的许多男女差异(例如免疫功能方面)可能至少部分受到此类与GI相关差异的影响。