Literature DB >> 22783642

Sport training and the growth and pubertal maturation of young athletes.

Robert M Matina1, Alan D Rogol.   

Abstract

Growth and pubertal maturation of youth athletes are overwhelmingly within the broad range of normal variability. These include many successful male athletes who mature earlier than average, and many successful female athletes, especially in the "aesthetic" sports (artistic gymnastics, ice-skating, ballet) and distance running, who mature later than average. Artistic gymnasts generally receive the most attention, but their growth and maturation characteristics fall largely within the physiologic range and are indistinguishable from short, late maturing girls. It is difficult to ascribe causality to intensive training for sport as a factor in the later pubertal maturation of heavily training athletes. The alterations in hypothalamic-pituitary function for the GH/IGF-I and gonadal axes are likely appropriate for the stage of adolescent maturation. The selection and sorting processes for elite sport, including ballet, need critical evaluation. If intensive training is a factor affecting growth and pubertal maturation, its effects must be partitioned from (a) other factors known to influence these biological processes, and (b) other components of the overall sport training environment before causality can be established. Other factors which play an indeterminate role include: genetics/epigenetics, stress, psychosocial interactions, family environment and caloric intake, among others. These factors together with the energy expenditure of intensive training may influence the growth and pubertal maturation of some adolescent athletes. The effect is not necessarily attributable to training per se; rather, it is likely embedded in the elite sport training environment which is essentially an adult dominated enterprise.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 22783642

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Endocrinol Rev        ISSN: 1565-4753


  9 in total

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Review 6.  Resistance Training in Youth: Laying the Foundation for Injury Prevention and Physical Literacy.

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7.  The Relationship between Body Fat Percentage and Some Anthropometric and Physical Fitness Characteristics in Pre- and Peripubertal Boys.

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8.  The Effects of 17 Weeks of Ballet Training on the Autonomic Modulation, Hormonal and General Biochemical Profile of Female Adolescents.

Authors:  Carla Cristiane da Silva; Tamara Beres Lederer Goldberg; Lúcio Flávio Soares-Caldeira; Ricardo Dos Santos Oliveira; Solange de Paula Ramos; Fábio Yuzo Nakamura
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9.  Structural equation model of the effect of biological maturation on metabolic syndrome risk and C-reactive protein: effect of trunk fat and sports participation.

Authors:  André O Werneck; Enio R V Ronque; Rômulo A Fernandes
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-10       Impact factor: 4.379

  9 in total

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