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Does Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (REDs) Syndrome Exist?

Authors :
Jeukendrup, Asker E
Areta, Jose L
Van Genechten, Lara
Langan-Evans, Carl
Pedlar, Charles R
Rodas, Gil
Sale, Craig
Walsh, Neil P
Jeukendrup, Asker E
Areta, Jose L
Van Genechten, Lara
Langan-Evans, Carl
Pedlar, Charles R
Rodas, Gil
Sale, Craig
Walsh, Neil P
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Relative energy deficiency in sport (REDs) is a widely adopted model, originally proposed by an International Olympic Committee (IOC) expert panel in 2014 and recently updated in an IOC 2023 consensus statement. The model describes how low energy availability (LEA) causes a wide range of deleterious health and performance outcomes in athletes. With increasing frequency, sports practitioners are diagnosing athletes with “REDs,” or “REDs syndrome,” based largely upon symptom presentation. The purpose of this review is not to “debunk” REDs but to challenge dogmas and encourage rigorous scientific processes. We critically discuss the REDs concept and existing empirical evidence available to support the model. The consensus (IOC 2023) is that energy availability, which is at the core of REDs syndrome, is impossible to measure accurately enough in the field, and therefore, the only way to diagnose an athlete with REDs appears to be by studying symptom presentation and risk factors. However, the symptoms are rather generic, and the causes likely multifactorial. Here we discuss that (1) it is very difficult to isolate the effects of LEA from other potential causes of the same symptoms (in the laboratory but even more so in the field); (2) the model is grounded in the idea that one factor causes symptoms rather than a combination of factors adding up to the etiology. For example, the model does not allow for high allostatic load (psychophysiological “wear and tear”) to explain the symptoms; (3) the REDs diagnosis is by definition biased because one is trying to prove that the correct diagnosis is REDs, by excluding other potential causes (referred to as differential diagnosis, although a differential diagnosis is supposed to find the cause, not demonstrate that it is a pre-determined cause); (4) observational/cross-sectional studies have typically been short duration (< 7 days) and do not address the long term “problematic LEA,” as described in the IOC 2023 consensus stateme

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457294399
Document Type :
Electronic Resource