Abstract

PurposeMale weight concerns tend to focus on shape and muscularity as opposed to a desire for thinness and remain underdetected by conventional eating disorder assessments. We aimed to describe the longitudinal course of weight concerns and disordered eating behaviors among males across adolescence and young adulthood. MethodsWe used prospective assessments of 4,489 U S. males, aged 11 to 18 years at baseline of analyses, in the Growing Up Today Study. We assigned mutually exclusive classifications of behaviors consistent with bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), purging disorder (PD); high levels of concern with thinness and/or muscularity; and use of muscle-enhancing products. We estimated the probability of maintenance, resolution, or transition to different weight concerns and/or disordered eating behaviors across consecutive survey waves. ResultsLess than 1% of participants met full or partial criteria for BN, PD, or BED at baseline. One-quarter (25.4%, n = 1,137) of males reported high weight concerns during follow-up; nearly all these cases (93.7%, n = 1,065) had high muscularity concerns. The most common transition in concerns or behaviors involved the addition of muscularity concerns to a preoccupation with thinness. Eleven percent of participants used muscle-building products during follow-up. Multi-year product use (23.0% [standard deviation 1.0%] of males who used products) was more common than maintenance of bulimic behaviors (3.0% [.7%] of BN/PD, 10.5% [1.2%] of BED cases). ConclusionsIntegrating muscularity concerns and product use into health promotion and screening tools may improve prevention and early detection of harmful body image and weight control among adolescent and young adult males.

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