| Literature DB >> 27622179 |
Marcelo R Ribeiro-Dos-Santos1, Kyle R Lynch2, Ricardo R Agostinete3, Santiago Maillane-Vanegas3, Bruna Turi-Lynch2, Igor H Ito2, Rafael Luiz-de-Marco1, Mario A Rodrigues-Junior2, Rômulo A Fernandes4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The practice of swimming in "hypogravity" conditions has potential to decrease bone formation because it decreases the time engaged in weight-bearing activities usually observed in the daily activities of adolescents. Therefore, adolescents competing in national levels would be more exposed to these deleterious effects, because they are engaged in long routines of training during most part of the year. To analyze the effect of swimming on bone mineral density (BMD) gain among adolescents engaged in national level competitions during a 9-month period.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Exercise; Sports; Stress mechanical
Year: 2016 PMID: 27622179 PMCID: PMC5018608 DOI: 10.11005/jbm.2016.23.3.149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Metab ISSN: 2287-6375
Effect of swimming on body composition variables among male adolescents (n=29)
a)Model adjusted by chronological age (baseline), vitamin D score (baseline), peak height velocity (baseline and mean difference between baseline and follow-up), engagement in resistance training (baseline) and previous practice of the swimming in months (baseline). b)ANOVA with P<0.05.
ANOVA, analysis of variance; SEM, standard error mean; BMD, bone mineral density; FFM, fat free mass; BF, body fatness; DXA, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; SW, swimming; ES-r, eta-squared.
Effect of swimming on body composition variables among female adolescents (n=26)
a)Model adjusted by chronological age (baseline), vitamin D score (baseline), peak height velocity (baseline and mean difference between baseline and follow-up), engagement in resistance training (baseline) and previous practice of the swimming in months (baseline).
ANOVA, analysis of variance; SEM, standard error mean; BMD, bone mineral density; FFM, fat free mass; BF, body fatness; DXA, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; SW, swimming; ES-r, eta-squared.
Body composition changes (%) in adolescents according to swimming and sex (n=55)
a)Model adjusted by chronological age (baseline), vitamin D score (baseline and follow-up), peak height velocity (baseline and mean difference between baseline and follow-up), engagement in resistance training (baseline) and previous practice of the swimming in months (baseline). b)ANOVA with P<0.05.
CI, confidence interval; BMD, bone mineral density; FFM, fat free mass; BF, body fatness; DXA, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; ES-r, eta-squared.
Fig. 1Partial correlation between time of previous practice and bone mineral density modifications among adolescents of both sexes (n=55). *Partial correlation adjusted by chronological age (baseline), vitamin D score (baseline and follow-up), peak height velocity (baseline), fat free mass (baseline), engagement in resistance training (baseline) and height. CI, confidence interval.