Literature DB >> 27537336

Radial and tibial bone indices in athletes participating in different endurance sports: a pQCT study.

Tanja Oosthuyse1, Joanne A McVeigh1, Lisa K Micklesfield2, Rebecca M Meiring1.   

Abstract

Low magnitude bone-loading sports may benefit bone structure and strength in the exercised limbs. This study compared peripheral quantitative computed tomography measures of radial and tibial diaphyseal strength (strength-strain index, SSI), structure (total area (ToA) and cortical area (CoA), density (CoD) and thickness (CT), and circumferences), muscle cross-sectional area (MCSA) and strength (one-repetition maximum, 1-RM) in male endurance athletes taking part in (i) non-weight-bearing and non-impact sports: swimmers (SWIM, n = 13) and road cyclists (RC, n = 10), (ii) non-weight-bearing, impact sport: mountain bikers (MB, n = 10), (iii) weight bearing and impact sport: runners (RUN, n = 9). All athlete groups were also compared to sedentary controls (CON, n = 10). Arm MCSA, 1-RM and radial bone size and strength tended to be greater in SWIM than CON and/or RC (ToA, %difference  ± 95%CI, SWIM-CON: 14.6% ± 12.7%; SWIM-RC: 12.9% ± 10.7%) but not different to MB and RUN. RUN had bigger tibial CoA than CON, SWIM and RC (CoA, RUN-CON: 12.1% ± 10.7%; RUN-SWIM: 10.9% ± 9.4%; RUN-RC: 15.8% ± 9.5%) without marked changes in tibial strength indices, lower-limb MCSA or 1-RM. Both MB and RC failed to display any difference in tibial indices, lower-limb MCSA and 1-RM compared to CON. In swimmers, the bone structure and strength of the primary exercised limbs, the arms, is greater than controls and road cyclists. Conversely, although runners experience impact and weight-bearing loading, tibial structure is greater without a substantial difference in tibial strength compared to controls and non-impact sports. Failure to observe a difference in tibial indices in MB and RC compared to controls is unexpected.

Keywords:  bone size; bone strength; endurance sports; muscle area; pQCT

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27537336     DOI: 10.1080/17461391.2016.1219770

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Sport Sci        ISSN: 1536-7290            Impact factor:   4.050


  2 in total

1.  Site-Specific Effects of Swimming on Bone Density in Female Collegiate Swimmers.

Authors:  Margaret Miller; Sarah Kojetin; Lesley Scibora
Journal:  Int J Exerc Sci       Date:  2020-02-01

2.  Effects of backhand stroke styles on bone mineral content and density in postmenopausal recreational tennis players: a cross-sectional pilot investigation.

Authors:  Ho-Seng Wang; Yi-Shan Tsai; Yung-Chih Chen; Hsiao-Han Chao; Hsin-Shih Lin; Yi-Pin Chiang; Hou-Yu Chen
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2021-07-29       Impact factor: 2.809

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.