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McCarthy, Paul – Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1989
The amount of protein needed by athletes is an area of controversy. Some researchers are studying the claims that protein supplements stimulate muscle growth. Others are examining the protein needs of endurance and strength athletes. However, few studies have controlled for the right mix of nutrition and exercise variables. (Author/SM)
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Muscular Strength, Nutrition
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Eichner, Edward R. – Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1989
Describes the scope and importance of gastrointestinal bleeding in runners and other athletes, discussing causes, sites, and implications of exercise-related bleeding. Practical tips to mitigate the problem, potentially more troublesome in women because of lower iron stores, are presented (e.g., gradual conditioning and avoidance of prerace…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Exercise Physiology, Injuries
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Kirkendall, Donald T.; Garrett, William E., Jr. – Journal of Athletic Training, 2001
Discusses how purposeful heading of soccer balls and head injuries affect soccer players' cognitive dysfunction. Cognitive deficits may occur for many reasons. Heading cannot be blamed when details of the actual event and impact are unknown. Concussions are the most common head injury in soccer and a factor in cognitive deficits and are probably…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Brain, Cognitive Ability
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Bar-Or, Oded – Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1989
Examines whether prepubescents are trainable in competitive sports, noting trainability differences between prepubescents and older groups. Changes in maximal aerobic power, metabolic cost of walking and running, muscle strength and power, and local muscle endurance are examined. Strength training is recommended only for rehabilitation or…
Descriptors: Aerobics, Athletics, Children, Exercise Physiology
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Eichner, Edward R. – Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1989
A review of literature on exercise and arthritis considers relevant epidemiologic and experimental studies of animals and humans, focusing on the relationship between running and osteoarthritis. No conclusive evidence exists that running causes osteoarthritis; research trends suggest that running may slow the functional aspects of musculoskeletal…
Descriptors: Athletics, Disease Incidence, Epidemiology, Etiology
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Park, Roberta J. – Quest, 1995
Developments in the biomedical sciences affect how people think about health and fitness, as do social and cultural factors. This paper examines two topics of interest to educators, physicians, and researchers in the physiological sciences from 1867-1950 (the phenomenon referred to as the athlete's heart and anthropometrical/growth and development…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Cardiovascular System, Exercise Physiology
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Waddington, Ivan – Sociology of Sport Journal, 1996
The development of sports medicine was influenced by medicalization and increasing competitiveness in modern sport, with sports physicians helping to develop performance enhancing drugs and techniques. This paper discusses sports medicine and drug use in Eastern European countries, early development of anabolic steroids in the United States, and…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Drug Abuse, Drug Use
Moriarty, Dick; Moriarty, Mary – 1994
Since sports can sometimes lend themselves to eating disorders, coaches and sports administrators must get involved in the detection and treatment of this problem. While no reliable studies or statistics exist on the incidence of anorexia nervosa and/or bulimia among athletes, some research suggests that such disorders occur frequently among…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anorexia Nervosa, Athletes, Athletics