Exercise addiction: A narrative overview of research issues.

Aviv Weinstein, Attila Szabo
Author Information
  1. Aviv Weinstein: The Isadore and Ruth Kastin Chair for Brain Research, Department of Psychology, University of Ariel, Ariel, Israel. ORCID
  2. Attila Szabo: Institute of Psychology, and Institute of Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. ORCID

Abstract

This narrative overview summarises the work on exercise addiction (EA) over the past 12 years and exposes critical conceptual and methodological issues. More than 1000 articles exist on EA, conceptualised as uncontrolled training harming the individual. Still, EA has no clinical diagnosis criteria at this time. Research is increasing continuously, but it is stale in advancing knowledge. Scalar measurement and lack of differentiation between and exercise could be reasons for insufficient progress. Exercise addiction fits in the framework of behavioural addictions, but excessive exercise patterns also co-occur with other morbidities, including eating or body-image disorders. In these cases, exercise is instrumental; it functions to achieve a non-exercise-related goal. Therefore, it is essential to separate primary from secondary EA. Based on the interactional model, significant stress and capacity-exceeding ambitions fuel primary EA, while chief motives behind secondary EA embed body image dissatisfaction and eating disorders. Few reports exist on EA's brain mechanisms, which could delay its classification as a distinct psychiatric dysfunction. Treatment of EA involves cognitive-behavioural approaches, but we know little about their effectiveness. Conceptually focussed psychophysiological research and in-depth interviews, complementing scalar data, could answer several open questions in this widely studied but relatively stagnant scholastic field.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Humans
Behavior, Addictive
Exercise

Word Cloud

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