Female Athlete Flashcards

1
Q

What are the MS and physiological differences between genders?

A
  1. prepubertal body fat differences - greater % total body and subcutaneous body fat and smaller vertebral cross-sectional dimension of parasminal mm in girls
    - testosterone increases lean body mass, estrogen increases fat deposition, breast development and widening of hips
    - lowest fat the body can tolerate without potential widespread adverse effects is 8-12%; decr in fat = decr in estrogen levels
  2. Adolescent - peak height velocity occurs 2 years earlier in girls (10.5-13 years); peak weight 6 months after peak height
  3. Skeletal maturity - Females 18 years; Males 22 years (4’’ taller, 29 lbs heavier)
  4. Strength differences - women’s mm cross section 60-85% of males; peak strength occurs 14 mos after peak height; no incr in puberty, as with boys, after 15 yrs; women have higher proportion Type I fibers; 5-10% lower resting metabolic rate
  5. no differences in response to strength and CV training
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2
Q

What qualifies as osteopenia in for children and adolescents 5-19yrs?

A

Z-score below -2.0 SD from means that are age, sex, and ethnic specific (ISD)

T-score below -1.0 to -2.5 SD below mean of young, normal, adults (WHO)

Z scores between -1.0 to -2.0 SD I the presence of secondary clinical risk factors (nutritional deficiency, low estrogen levels, stress fx, etc.) (ACSM)

  • declines in bone density are directly proportional to the number of missed periods, indicating the severity and length of time that amenorrhea is present directly impacts bone health
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3
Q

What needs to be addressed to prevent injury?

A
  1. HS/quad ratio
  2. core strength
  3. postural training
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4
Q

What MS injuries are more common in women?

A
  1. patellofemoral pain
  2. ACL injury - females 2-8x risk; NM mechanism
  3. Shoulder pain - trauma, over use; higher incidence in females in UE/LE combo sports; hyper mobility common
  4. LBP - No difference between athletes/non-athletes or males/females for acute disk herniation; Spondylolysis and Spondylolisthesis - Incidence 63% diving, 32% gymnastics
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5
Q

What intrinsic and extrinsic factors contribute to ACL injury in females?

A
  • Intrinsic risk factors - Intercondylar notch size/shape, malalignment, physiological laxity, HS flexibility, posture, proprioception, hormone levels
  • Extrinsic risk factors - Training, conditioning, coaching, muscular activation patterns, jumping/landing characteristics, knee stiffness
  • Other female risk factors for knee injury: shortened quad, altered VMO reflex response time, decreased explosive strength, hypermobile patella, Q angle differences
  • Clinical features: anterior, lateral anteriomedial pain, tenderness with palpation; crepitus, movie-goers sign, pain with stairs
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6
Q

Where do stress fractures occur most commonly?

A

tibia 34% > Fibula 24% > Metatarsals 20% > Femur 14% > Pelvis 6%

  • Stress fx = mild, mod, severe local pain; Mod to severe local tenderness; x-ray may show fx after 10-14 days
  • Stress rxn = mild to mod local pain; Mild to mod local tenderness; x-ray normal
  • Bone strain = nil local pain; nil local tenderness; x-ray normal
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7
Q

What are the 3 parts that make up the female athlete triad?

A
  1. disordered eating - anorexia, bulimia, EDNOS
  2. menstrual dysfuntion
  3. low BMD
  • low energy availability (decr in leptin) = dcr GnRH from hypothalamus –> decr LH, FSH from pituitary –> menstural dysfunction
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8
Q

What are S and S of anorexia nervosa?

A

Cold intolerance, amenorrhea, lightheadedness, constipation, abdominal bloating, fatigue, decreases concentration, dry skin/hair/nails, hypothermia, bradycardia, lanugo

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9
Q

What are S and S of bulimia nervosa?

A

Fatigue, constipation/diarrhea, irregular menses, sore throat, bloating/abdominal pain, peripheral edema, erosion of dental enamel, orthostatic BP changes, problems related to fluid loss

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10
Q

What are nutritional recommendations?

A
  1. Fluids - important to hydrate prior to exercise
  2. General guideline is 14-23 cal/lb body weight
  3. nutritional needs - electrolytes and carb replenishment helps in high intensity exercise
  4. leptin
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11
Q

What is the avg age onset of mensuration?

A

Avg age onset 12.8 + 1.2 years

  • Normal cycle length 28 days
  • Ovarian function depends on secretion of hypothalamic GnRH. Disturbance of GnRH pulse generator which leads to hypoestrogenic state. Stimulates release of FSH and LH from pituitary
  • Energy availability affected LH more than stress (Loucks et al). Dietary energy not enough for both reproduction and locomotion
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12
Q

What is the avg age onset of mensuration?

A

Avg age onset 12.8 + 1.2 years

  • Normal cycle length 28 days
  • Ovarian function depends on secretion of hypothalamic GnRH. Disturbance of GnRH pulse generator which leads to hypoestrogenic state. Stimulates release of FSH and LH from pituitary
  • Energy availability affected LH more than stress (Loucks et al). Dietary energy not enough for both reproduction and locomotion
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13
Q

What are the phases of the menstrual cycle?

A

Menses to ovulation:

  1. Follicular phase - FSH/ LH secreted causing growth in follicle (ovarian cycle)
  2. Proliferative phase - Incr levels of estrogen cause endometrium to develop (endometrial cycle)

Ovulation to menses:

  1. Luteal phase - release of egg; 14 days in length; estrogen/ progesterone case decrease FSH/ LH (ovarian cycle)
  2. Secretory phase - proliferation of endometrium occurs (endometrial cycle)
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14
Q

What causes the luteal phase to shorten during luteal phase deficiency?

A

decrease in progesterone

  • infertility may occur, still menstruate
  • an ovulation = decr progesterone causes ovulation to stop
  • hypoestrogenic amenorrhea = eventually with low prog. levels and lack of ovulation, estrogen level drop causing amenorrhea
  • lab studies related = blood count for anemia, electrolytes, creatinine, albumin, TSH, pregnancy test
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15
Q

What is primary amenorrhea?

A
  • No menstruation by age 14 without secondary sex characteristics
    OR
  • Normal growth/development without menstruation by age 16
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16
Q

What is secondary amenorrhea?

A
  • Absence of menstruation >3months if previously regular or 6 months if irregular
  • 2-5% general pop, 50% endurance athletes
17
Q

What constitutes oligomenorrhea?

A

Cycle > 36 days

  • Accepted that menstrual dysfunction caused by low energy availability <30kcal/kg body weight**
  • Workup should include seum eval of thyroid stim hormone, FSH, prolactin levels, pregnancy, progestional challenge test
  • HRT controversial, only used if decr ex, incr eating, weight gain not helpful
18
Q

What is the minimum body fat % to avoid widespread adverse effects on the female body?

A

8-12%

19
Q

How much skeletal mass and height is achieved during adolescence?

A

48% skeletal mass, 15% height

  • 90% peak mass acquired by 18
  • athletes with amenorrhea = hypoestrogenic state; unmade to regain lost BMD due to this
20
Q

What is the possible 4th component of the female athlete triad?

A

Cardio vascular

  • amenorrheamic athletes have higher CHO and LDL
  • estrogen levels protect vascular function and serum lipoprotein profiles; protective effects may be diminished or lost
21
Q

What can PTs do to contribute the prevention of the FAT during PT exam?

A

inquire about:

  1. What the athlete ate that day
  2. Relationship with her coach
  3. Weight/height
  4. Menstrual history