Female Athlete Representation and Dietary Control Methods Among Studies Assessing Chronic Carbohydrate Approaches to Support Training

Author:

Kuikman Megan A.1ORCID,McKay Alannah K.A.1ORCID,Smith Ella S.1ORCID,Ackerman Kathryn E.2ORCID,Harris Rachel34ORCID,Elliott-Sale Kirsty J.5ORCID,Stellingwerff Trent67ORCID,Burke Louise M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

2. Female Athlete Program, Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

3. Female Performance and Health Initiative, Australian Institute of Sport, Canberra, ACT, Australia

4. Perth Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Research Institute, West Perth, WA, Australia

5. Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, Institute of Sport, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, United Kingdom

6. Canadian Sport Institute-Pacific, Institute for Sport Excellence, Victoria, BC, Canada

7. Exercise Science, Physical and Health Education, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada

Abstract

The aim of this audit was to assess the representation of female athletes, dietary control methods, and gold standard female methodology that underpins the current guidelines for chronic carbohydrate (CHO) intake strategies for athlete daily training diets. Using a standardized audit, 281 studies were identified that examined high versus moderate CHO, periodized CHO availability, and/or low CHO, high fat diets. There were 3,735 total participants across these studies with only ∼16% of participants being women. Few studies utilized a design that specifically considered females, with only 16 studies (∼6%) including a female-only cohort and six studies (∼2%) with a sex-based comparison in their statistical procedure, in comparison to the 217 studies (∼77%) including a male-only cohort. Most studies (∼72%) did not provide sufficient information to define the menstrual status of participants, and of the 18 studies that did, optimal methodology for control of ovarian hormones was only noted in one study. While ∼40% of male-only studies provided all food and beverages to participants, only ∼20% of studies with a female-specific design used this approach for dietary control. Most studies did not implement strategies to ensure compliance to dietary interventions and/or control energy intake during dietary interventions. The literature that has contributed to the current guidelines for daily CHO intake is lacking in research that is specific to, or adequately addresses, the female athlete. Redressing this imbalance is of high priority to ensure that the female athlete receives evidence-based recommendations that consider her specific needs.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference47 articles.

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