8 research outputs found
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Delayed Menarche and Amenorrhea in Ballet Dancers
YOUNG female ballet dancers attending professional schools or dancing in companies in which thinness is much admired restrict their food intake and are highly active. The unusual eating habits and levels of activity of some of these dancers have been related to lack of menstrual cycles.1 Amenorrhea and late menarche among girls and women with average activity levels are associated with undernutrition and weight loss in the range of 10 to 15 per cent of the normal weight for height; such weight loss apparently reduces the fat/lean ratio to less than a critical level. We report here on 89 young ballet dancers among whom there was a high incidence of primary amenorrhea, secondary amenorrhea, irregular cycles, and delayed menarche — an incidence correlated with excessive thinness
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Breast cancer among former college athletes compared to non-athletes: A 15-year follow-up
A growing body of evidence indicates that physical activity is protective against breast cancer. In 1996-97, we conducted a 15-year follow-up of 5398 college alumnae comprised of former college athletes with their non-athletic classmates. Participants completed a detailed mailed questionnaire on their health history from 1981-82 to the present. Excluding women who had died and non-deliverable questionnaires, 84.7% (n = 3940) of the participants in our earlier study responded to the questionnaire; the response rate for former athletes was 86.6% (n = 1945), for non-athletes, 83.0% (n = 1995). Results confirmed our earlier findings. Based on self-reports, former college athletes had a significantly lower risk of breast cancer than the non-athletes. The OR for the 15-year incidence of breast cancer is 0.605 with 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.438-0.835); the 15-year incident breast cancers were 64 among the athletes and 111 among the non-athletes. Among women under 45 the protective effect of physical activity on the risk of breast cancer is considerably greater; odds ratio (OR) = 0.164, 95% CI (0.042-0.636). Athletic activity during the college and pre-college years is protective against breast cancer throughout the life span, and more markedly among women under 45. These results confirm our earlier findings and the findings of other investigators
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Association between endometriosis, dysplastic naevi and history of melanoma in women of reproductive age
Women with melanoma and its precursor lesions, dysplastic naevi, have a higher prevalence of reproductive disorders than women without melanotic lesions. This association appears strongest among young women with dysplastic naevi and endometriosis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate patients with laparoscopy-confirmed endometriosis for the presence of dysplastic naevi. A total of 66 endometriosis patients and 35 controls completed a detailed questionnaire and underwent an extensive dermatological examination for the presence of dysplastic naevi. In all, 41% of patients aged < or = 32 years had dysplastic naevi, compared with 8% of controls (P = 0.038). In addition, 29% of patients with endometriosis reported a family history of melanoma compared with 10% of controls (P = 0.039). This study demonstrated an association between endometriosis and dysplastic naevi in younger women of reproductive age and found an associated family history of melanoma among endometriosis patients. These observations may be useful in the evaluation and care of young women by both gynaecologists and dermatologists