|
Elite athletes may have asthma and
not know it
New York -
New research hints that a large number of Olympic athletes may
be using inhaled steroids for exercise-induced asthma when they don't
have the condition, while others may unknowingly have exercise-induced
asthma and aren't being treated.
The findings stem in large part from
changes in asthma criteria instituted by the International Olympic
Committee's Medical Commission (IOC-MC) in 2001.
Prior to 2001, Olympic athletes who
using inhaled steroids for asthma need only get the team doctor to
sign a form stating that the athlete had asthma and needed the
medication.
Since 2001, the IOC-MC has required
that Olympic athletes using inhaled steroids for exercise-induced
asthma provide clinical evidence for their asthmatic condition in the
form of a physiological test performed by a doctor.
"A doctor's signature was not good
enough after 2001," John Dickinson, a research physiologist at the
English Institute of Sport, Bisham Abbey High Performance Center in
the UK told Reuters Health, even though inhaled short acting
beta-agonists have no performance enhancing effects.
To gauge the impact of the IOC rule
change, Dickinson and others compared the prevalence of
exercise-induced asthma within the Great Britain Olympic teams of 2000
and 2004. They report their results in the medical journal Thorax.
The researchers discovered that the
prevalence of asthma within the Great Britain Olympic team remained
unchanged between 2000 and 2004. According to Dickinson, "we
demonstrated that one in five elite athletes suffer from
exercise-induced asthma."
At the same time, however, the 2001
IOC-MC requirement that asthmatic athletes submit physiologic evidence
of their disease has highlighted that 13 of 62 athletes on the 2004
team, or 21 percent, with a previous diagnosis of asthma had negative
bronchodilator test results, indicating that they may no longer have
asthma.
In contrast, seven other athletes on
the team who had no previous history of asthma tested positive for
exercise-induced asthma.
"As a result, we have recommended to
all elite athletes and teams that it is best to screen athletes for
exercise-induced asthma rather than rely on athletes reporting
symptoms to their doctor," Dickinson told Reuters Health.
This is because it is sometimes
difficult to recognize the symptoms of exercise-induced asthma
especially when an athlete only has a mild case, he explained.
"A large number of athletes have
exercise-induced asthma," according to Dickinson. "This does not mean
that they can't compete at the highest level as many of our asthmatic
elite athletes won medals at the Olympic Games."
The key is to ensure athletes are
correctly diagnosed, "so they can receive the correct treatment that
will enable them to compete to their maximum potential," he added.
It's quite possible that other
national Olympic teams are fielding athletes with undiagnosed asthma
as well as athletes using inhaled steroids who don't need them,
Dickinson said.
"Our report is the first to describe
the prevalence of asthma in Olympic teams since the rule change so it
is difficult to compare our prevalence rate to other countries at the
moment." -- Reuters
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|