ахахаха вот, один парень уже прокомментировал анализ товарищей из Bayloc College of Medicine.
https://medium.com/@anthonyroberts/stud ... .i5a1uwuuo
A recent study identified 1,578 professional male bodybuilders who competed between 1948–2014. Out of that number, complete mortality data was available and obtained for 597 of them (i.e. the researchers were able to identify conclusively which of the 597 were dead or alive).*
Out of the 597 bodybuilders with conclusive mortality data,
58 (9.7%) were dead and 539 (90.3%) were alive (the study did not say how many were still alive, but rolling around in wheel chairs screaming “light weight baby!”).
Based on age and sex-matched data, a total of 40 deaths should have been expected in this population. Therefore, professional bodybuilders are dying at a rate 34% higher than the average American male of the same age.
Interestingly, the mean age of death was 47.7 years, but if the bodybuilders made it past 50, they (pretty much) fell back into a normal mortality range.
*
The other 981 professional bodybuilders noted in the opening paragraph failed to contribute to this study, just like they failed at life in general.