Nancy Clark, MS,
RD CSSD (Board Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics) counsels
active people at her private practice located at Healthworks,
the premier fitness center in Chestnut Hill, Massachussetts
(617.383.6100). Her popular Sports Nutrition Guidebook, NEW
2007 Food Guide for Marathoners and Cyclists Food Guide
offers additional information. They are available via nancyclarkrd.com.
For online education and workshop information, visit sportsnutritionworkshop.com.
Nutrition
Tips for Women with Amenorrhea
Ive been training so hard, Ive stopped
getting my menstrual period. Is that normal?
Should I take the birth control pill so I start menstruating
again?
Is it OK to not have a period for several months?
If you are among the estimated 20 percent of active women
who has missed three or more consecutive menstrual periods,
you are experiencing amenorrhea. Although some women see amenorrhea
as desirable because they no longer have to deal with the
hassles and possible discomfort of monthly menstrual periods,
others recognize absence of periods is linked with serious
health problems: loss of calcium from the bones, almost a
three times higher incidence of stress fractures and long-term
problems with early osteoporosis. Amenorrhea can also interfere
with the ability to conceive easily should you want to start
a family.
Amenorrhea is not sport-specific, but sports that emphasize
lightnessballet, competitive runninghave the highest
prevalence (up to 44 percentthis is much higher than
the 2-5 percent in the general female population). Many of
these athletes believe they have stopped menstruating because
they are exercising too much or are too thin, with too little
body fat. Not the case. Many very thin athletes who exercise
very hard have regular menses.
Why then, given a group of women who have similar exercise
programs and a low percent body fat, do some experience menstrual
problems while others dont? The answer commonly relates
to nutrition. Women with amenorrhea may be undereating. When
the body experiences famine-like conditions (i.e., restrictive
dieting), menstruation stops due to inadequate fuel to support
the menstrual process, to say nothing of the fuel needed to
nurture a healthy baby.
Amenorrhea and restrictive eating
The American Psychiatric Associations definition of
anorexia includes absence of at least three consecutive
menstrual cycles. Other criteria include: weight loss
15 percent below the expected weight, intense fear of gaining
weight or becoming fat and distorted body image (i.e., claiming
to feel fat even when emaciated). All of these concerns are
common to female athletes. Hence, loss of menses among active
women can be a red flag symptomatic of restrictive, anorectic-type
eating behaviors.
Resolving the problem
If you no longer get regular monthly periods and feel as though
you are struggling to balance food and exercise, please get
a nutrition check-up with a sports dietician (as well as a
medical check-up with your doctor or gynecologist). To find
a sports dietician in your area, use the American Dietetic
Associations referral networks at SCANdpg.org
or eatright.org.
Taking the birth control pill does not solve the problem.
The most important change required to resume menses includes
balancing your calories so you can support both your exercise
program and normal body functions. You can achieve energy
balance by exercising 5-15 percent less and eating a little
more, or by simply eating enough more to support your training.
The goal is to have about 15 calories per pound of body weight
of available energy. This means, if you weigh
100 pounds, you need about 1,500 calories plus enough calories
to replace those burned during exercise. For example, if you
run 10 miles and burn 1,000 calories, you then need about
2,500 calories for the entire day, or more if you have a very
active lifestyle.
The following tips may also help you resume menses-or at
least rule out nutrition-related factors.
1.
Throw away the bathroom scale. Rather than striving to
achieve a certain number on the scale, let your body achieve
a natural weight that matches your genetics.
2. Take a vacation from dieting even if you have weight
you want to lose. If you cannot let go of your compulsion
to lose weight, knock off only 100 to 200 calories at the
end of the day (so you are not in energy deficit during the
day). This small change can result in losing 10 to 20 pounds
of fat per year and is far more sustainable than the food
chaos that accompanies on-a-diet-off-a-diet patterns common
to many women. If you are hungry all the time, and think about
food too much, you are eating too few calories.
3. Eat adequate protein. When you underconsume calories,
your body burns protein (from food and your muscles) for energy.
With less muscle tugging on bones, the bones become weaker.
A 120-pound athlete should target 60 to 90 grams protein each
day. Track your intake at fitday.com.
4. Eat at least 20 percent of your calories from (primarily
healthful) fat. If you believe you will get fat if you
eat fat, think again. While excess calories from fat are easily
fattening, a little fat at each meal (40 to 65 grams per day)
is an important part of a sports diet. Your body uses fat
to absorb vitamins A, D, E and K. Enjoy nuts, peanut butter,
salmon, olive oil and avocado.
5. Eat a calcium-rich food at each meal to help maintain
bone density. This means cereal with milk, lowfat cheese
on a lunchtime sandwich, a decaf latte in the afternoon and
a yogurt after dinner. Exercise helps keep your bones strong,
but adequate calcium is also critical. The birth control pill
offers no benefit for bone health.
6. Get adequate vitamin D to help with calcium absorption
and bone health. The presence of sunlight on the skin
makes vitamin D. If you are an indoor athlete
(gym rat, ballet dancer, figure skater) who gets little sunshine,
be sure to choose foods fortified with D (milk, some breakfast
cereals), fatty fish like salmon, and/or a multivitamin supplement.
Is there long-term damage?
Women who resume menses can restore some but not all of the
bone density lost during their months of amenorrhea. The younger
you are, the better your chances of recovery. Dont let
your athletic aspirations be sidelined with stress fractures.
Win with nutrition!
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