Nutritional Assessment, Body Composition, and Low Energy Availability in Sport Climbing Athletes of Different Genders and Categories: A Cross-Sectional Study
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Mora Fernández, Agustín; Argüello Arbe, Andrea; Tojeiro Iglesias, Andrea; Latorre, José Antonio; Conde Pipó, Javier; Mariscal Arcas, MiguelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Nutrition assessment Sport climbing Bouldering
Date
2024-09-03Referencia bibliográfica
Mora-Fernandez, A.; Argüello-Arbe, A.; Tojeiro-Iglesias, A.; Latorre, J.A.; Conde-Pipó, J.; Mariscal- Arcas, M. Nutritional Assessment, Body Composition, and Low Energy Availability in Sport Climbing Athletes of Different Genders and Categories: A Cross-Sectional Study. Nutrients 2024, 16, 2974. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16172974
Sponsorship
High Council for Sports (CSD), Spanish Ministry of Culture and Sport through the NESA NETWORK “Spanish Network of Sports Care at Altitude (RADA)”, Ref. 19/UPB/23; University of Granada (Own Research Plan—P. 10)Abstract
Climbing is an Olympic discipline in full development and multidisciplinary in nature,
where the influences of body composition and nutritional status on performance have not yet been
clarified despite the quest for a low weight in anti-gravity disciplines such as climbing. The present
cross-sectional study aimed to conduct nutritional (3-day dietary diaries) and body composition
(ISAK profile) assessments on sport climbing athletes by gender and climbing level during the
months of February and March 2024. The t-test for independent samples and the Mann–Whitney
U-test, as well as an ANOVA and the Kruskal–Wallis H-test, were used to compare the distributions
of two or more groups, respectively, and Pearson’s and Spearman’s correlation coefficients were
used to estimate the correlations between the different variables. The mean age of the 46 Spanish
climbers (22 men and 24 women) was 30 years (SD: 9) with 7.66 years of experience (SD: 6.63). The
mean somatotype of the athletes was classified as balanced mesomorph. Negative correlations were
observed between fat mass variables and climbing level (p < 0.010), and positive correlations were
observed with forearm circumference (p < 0.050). The mean energy availability (EA) was 33.01 kcal-kg
FFM−1d−1 (SD: 9.02), with 55.6% of athletes having a suboptimal EA status and 35.6% having low
energy availability (LEA). The carbohydrate and protein intakes were below the recommendations in
57.8% and 31.1% of athletes, respectively. There were deficient intakes of all micronutrients except
phosphorus in males. These findings suggest that climbing athletes are at a high risk of developing
low energy availability states and concomitant problems. Optimal nutritional monitoring may be
advisable in this type of athlete to try to reduce the risk of LEA.