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Bone Mineral Content of Amenorrheic and Eumenorrheic Athletes

List of authors.
  • Barbara L. Drinkwater, Ph.D.,
  • Karen Nilson, M.D.,
  • Charles H. Chesnut, III, M.D.,
  • William J. Bremner, M.D., Ph.D.,
  • Sydney Shainholtz, M.S.,
  • and Molly B. Southworth, M.D.

Abstract

This study was designed to determine whether the hypoestrogenic status of 14 amenorrheic athletes was associated with a decrease in regional bone mass relative to that of 14 of their eumenorrheic peers. The two groups of athletes were matched for age, height, weight, sport, and training regimens. Bone mass was measured by dual-photon and single-photon absorptiometry at the lumbar vertebrae (L1 to L4) and at two sites on the radius. Vertebral mineral density was significantly lower in the amenorrheic group (mean, 1.12 g per square centimeter) than in the eumenorrheic group (mean, 1.30 g per square centimeter). There was no significant difference at either radial site. Radioimmunoassay confirmed a lower mean estradiol concentration (amenorrheic group, 38.58 pg per milliliter; eumenorrheic group, 106.99 pg per milliliter) and progesterone peak (amenorrheic group, 1.25 ng per milliliter; eumenorrheic group, 12.75 ng per milliliter) in the amenorrheic women, in four venous samples drawn at seven-day intervals. A three-day dietary history showed no significant differences in nutritional intake, including calcium with and without supplements. The two groups were similar in percentage of body fat, age at menarche, years of athletic participation, and frequency and duration of training but differed in number of miles run per week (amenorrheic group, 41.8 miles [67.3 km]; eumenorrheic group, 24.9 miles [40.1 km]). We conclude that the amenorrhea that is observed in female athletes may be accompanied by a decrease in mineral density of the lumbar vertebrae. (N Engl J Med 1984; 311: 277–81.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by a grant from the University of Washington Graduate School Research Fund, Public Health Service grants (RR-07096 and HD-12629) from the National Institutes of Health, and by the Veterans Administration.

We are indebted to Robert Muram, Barbara Lewellen, Nancy Lewis, Helen Backus, Florida Flor, Lorraine Shen, Patricia Gosciewski, Colleen Johnson, and Barbara Bruemmer for technical assistance.

Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Kinesiology, Medicine, and Orthopedics, Divisions of Sports Medicine and Nuclear Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle; and the Endocrinology Section, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Seattle. Address reprint requests to Dr. Drinkwater at the Department of Kinesiology DX-10, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195.

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