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Author Topic:   Funny research study on PubMed
Zeacky
Pro Bodybuilder
(Total posts: 105)
posted August 15, 2000 11:12 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Zeacky   Click Here to Email Zeacky     Edit/Delete Message
Am J Psychiatry 2000 Aug;157(8):1291-6 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut


Muscle dysmorphia in male weightlifters: A case-control study.

Olivardia R, Pope HG Jr, Hudson JI

[Medline record in process]

OBJECTIVE: Muscle dysmorphia is a form of body dysmorphic disorder in which individuals develop a pathological preoccupation with their muscularity. METHOD: The authors interviewed 24 men with muscle dysmorphia and 30 normal comparison weightlifters, recruited from gymnasiums in the Boston area, using a battery of demographic, psychiatric, and physical measures. RESULTS: The men with muscle dysmorphia differed significantly from the normal comparison weightlifters on numerous measures, including body dissatisfaction, eating attitudes, prevalence of anabolic steroid use, and lifetime prevalence of DSM-IV mood, anxiety, and eating disorders. The men with muscle dysmorphia frequently described shame, embarrassment, and impairment of social and occupational functioning in association with their condition. By contrast, normal weightlifters displayed little pathology. Indeed, in an a posteriori analysis, the normal weightlifters proved closely comparable to a group of male college students recruited as a normal comparison group in an earlier study. CONCLUSIONS: Muscle dysmorphia appears to be a valid diagnostic entity, possibly related to a larger group of disorders, and is associated with striking and stereotypical features. Men with muscle dysmorphia differ sharply from normal weightlifters, most of whom display little psychopathology. Further research is necessary to characterize the nosology and potential treatment of this syndrome.

PMID: 10910793, UI: 20372381

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