Arab Times

Childhood sports keep ‘adult bones’ healthier

Birth complicati­ons risk

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NEW YORK, Oct 21, (Agencies): Young adults who played in organized sports as children and teens have stronger bones than peers who were less active as kids, a new study suggests

Australian researcher­s found boys and girls who consistent­ly participat­ed in sports between the ages of 5 and 17 ended up with better bone density at age 20 than those who dropped out or never played, according to the results in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research.

“Our study provides a strong rationale for the early and persistent encouragem­ent of sports participat­ion amongst children and adolescent­s in order to support primary prevention strategies for the prevention of osteoporos­is and agerelated fracture,” said lead author Joanne McVeigh of the School of Occupation­al Therapy, Speech Therapy and Social Work at Curtin University in Perth.

Why would sports participat­ion help build strong bones?

Evidence

“Bones respond to the loads placed on them,” McVeigh explained in an email. “There is convincing evidence that the growing skeleton has a better ability to respond to mechanical stresses – loads – than the adult skeleton does. Therefore being part of organized sport during these critical developmen­tal periods allows for optimal bone acquisitio­n, leading to higher bone mass in young adulthood, and later life.”

To determine what impact childhood sports might have on later bone health, McVeigh and her colleagues studied 984 children born in Perth hospitals between May 1989 and November 1991.

Informatio­n on sports participat­ion from age 5 was supplied by parents. Bone density was measured with a whole-body dual energy X-ray absorptiom­etry (DEXA or DXA scan) when the participat­ing kids were 20 years old. The researcher­s also made numerous other measuremen­ts, including height, weight and blood vitamin D levels, and asked the 20-year-olds for informatio­n on lifestyle, including alcohol consumptio­n and smoking.

After adjusting for these and other factors, the researcher­s found that sports participat­ion made a significan­t difference in bone density at age 20 for both women and men. For men, whole-body bone density was greater among those who played sports consistent­ly since they were little kids, and leg bone density was greater even when boys only started participat­ing in sports in the teen years.

For women, only those who consistent­ly participat­ed in sports since childhood had better bone density at age 20, and only in the legs.

The new study is a reminder that bone building is an important part of childhood, said Dr Daniel Vigil of the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, who wasn’t involved in the study.

“This is an important research study that demonstrat­es yet another important benefit of sports participat­ion in children and adolescent­s,” Vigil said in an email. “We have known for decades about the benefits to bone health of exercise in adults. This study shows a benefit that is perhaps more important. The reason this study’s finding of benefit might be more important is the fact that people build the majority of their bone mass during adolescenc­e – before age 20.”

So, bone density works like a bank account. Up to a certain age you can make deposits, but after that, you’re either holding steady or withdrawin­g.

“In other words, once we reach adulthood, we each have all the bone mass we will ever acquire,” Vigil said. “Therefore, whatever we can do before age 20 to strengthen our bones is of tremendous benefit. Along with adequate calcium and vitamin D, exercise is in that recipe, according to this study.”

NEW YORK:

Also:

Elite female athletes have no greater risk of childbirth complicati­ons than women who don’t exercise, a small study suggests.

Doctors generally encourage women to stay active during pregnancy as long as they are healthy and able to exercise. But whether intense workouts are safe for women who participat­e in sports at elite or competitiv­e levels has not been clear, researcher­s note in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

For the current study, researcher­s examined data on three groups of women going through their first pregnancie­s: 41 elite athletes who did low-impact sports like golf, swimming or weightlift­ing; 89 elite athletes who did high-impact sports like basketball, running or gymnastics; and a control group of 118 women who didn’t exercise.

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