Rowing Australia, Canberra, ACT 2600, Australia.
Mary MacKillop Institute of Health Research, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia.
Nutrients. 2022 Apr 29;14(9):1873. doi: 10.3390/nu14091873.
A questionnaire-based screening tool for male athletes at risk of low energy availability (LEA) could facilitate both research and clinical practice. The present options rely on proxies for LEA such screening tools for disordered eating, exercise dependence, or those validated in female athlete populations. in which the female-specific sections are excluded. To overcome these limitations and support progress in understanding LEA in males, centres in Australia, Norway, Denmark, and Sweden collaborated to develop a screening tool (LEAM-Q) based on clinical investigations of elite and sub-elite male athletes from multiple countries and ethnicities, and a variety of endurance and weight-sensitive sports. A bank of questions was developed from previously validated questionnaires and expert opinion on various clinical markers of LEA in athletic or eating disorder populations, dizziness, thermoregulation, gastrointestinal symptoms, injury, illness, wellbeing, recovery, sleep and sex drive. The validation process covered reliability, content validity, a multivariate analysis of associations between variable responses and clinical markers, and Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC) curve analysis of variables, with the inclusion threshold being set at 60% sensitivity. Comparison of the scores of the retained questionnaire variables between subjects classified as cases or controls based on clinical markers of LEA revealed an internal consistency and reliability of 0.71. Scores for sleep and thermoregulation were not associated with any clinical marker and were excluded from any further analysis. Of the remaining variables, dizziness, illness, fatigue, and sex drive had sufficient sensitivity to be retained in the questionnaire, but only low sex drive was able to distinguish between LEA cases and controls and was associated with perturbations in key clinical markers and questionnaire responses. In summary, in this large and international cohort, low sex drive was the most effective self-reported symptom in identifying male athletes requiring further clinical assessment for LEA.
一种基于问卷的男性运动员低能量状态(LEA)风险筛查工具,可以促进研究和临床实践。目前的选择依赖于 LEA 的替代指标,例如饮食障碍、运动依赖或在女性运动员人群中验证的筛查工具,但这些工具会排除女性特有的部分。为了克服这些限制,并支持对男性 LEA 的理解取得进展,澳大利亚、挪威、丹麦和瑞典的中心合作开发了一种筛查工具(LEAM-Q),该工具基于对来自多个国家和种族、多种耐力和体重敏感运动的精英和次精英男性运动员的临床研究,以及对各种临床标志物的评估。从先前验证的问卷和专家意见中开发了一个问题库,这些问题涉及到运动员或饮食障碍人群中 LEA 的各种临床标志物,如头晕、体温调节、胃肠道症状、损伤、疾病、幸福感、恢复、睡眠和性欲。验证过程包括可靠性、内容有效性、变量反应与临床标志物之间的多元分析,以及变量的接收者操作特征(ROC)曲线分析,纳入阈值设定为 60%的敏感性。根据 LEA 的临床标志物将保留问卷变量的得分与病例或对照受试者进行比较,结果显示内部一致性和可靠性为 0.71。睡眠和体温调节的得分与任何临床标志物均无关联,因此被排除在进一步分析之外。在其余变量中,头晕、疾病、疲劳和性欲具有足够的敏感性,可以保留在问卷中,但只有低性欲能够区分 LEA 病例和对照,并与关键临床标志物和问卷反应的改变相关。总之,在这个大型国际队列中,低性欲是识别需要进一步临床评估 LEA 的男性运动员的最有效的自我报告症状。