| Literature DB >> 32210834 |
Hansa Patel1, Luke Sammut2, Hayley Denison3, Paul Teesdale-Spittle1, Elaine Dennison1,4.
Abstract
Introduction: Osteoporotic fractures represent a major public health burden. The risk of fragility fractures in late adulthood is strongly impacted by peak bone mass acquisition by the third decade. Weight-bearing sporting activity may be beneficial to peak bone mass accrual, but previous studies have focused on elite sporting activity and have used dual energy X-ray absorptiometry as a measure of bone density. The authors performed a narrative systematic review of individual sports (performed non-competitively or at local level) and calcaneal quantitative ultrasound (cQUS) bone measures in young people.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent; bone; calcaneal quantitative ultrasound (cQUS); sport; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32210834 PMCID: PMC7069218 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Summary of search strings used.
| (sport OR sport* OR exercise OR exercis* OR physical OR soccer OR football OR rugby OR athlet* OR swimming OR tennis OR gym* OR basketball OR “martial art” OR boxing OR cycling OR recreation OR cricket OR hockey OR Ball or golf OR badminton OR cycling OR wrestling) |
| AND |
| (bone AND health) OR (bone AND mass AND density) OR DXA OR DEXA OR BMD OR BMC OR SOS OR BUA OR SI OR (hip OR spine OR heel) AND ultrasound |
| AND |
| (adolescent OR child OR girl OR boy OR juvenile OR teen* OR young OR people OR student OR youth OR minor OR college OR school OR paed* OR pedia*) |
Include: Synonyms, related terms, opposites, international terms, alternative spellings, plurals, truncations and wildcards (* or $ or # to substitute for one character within a word), and proximity operators NEAR, NEXT, ADJ.
Key study characteristics.
| Vlachopoulos et al. ( | Longitudinal (PRO-BONE study) | Total | Sport (swimming, soccer, cycling) duration >3 years | Controls: no sport like soccer, swimming or cycling for more 3 h/week nor 3 years prior | QUS heel mean of both feet, measured twice | Lunar Achilles Insight (TM Insight GE Healthcare), Milwaukee, WI, USA). | 12 months football participation associated better SI than for cycling or swimming |
| Aged 13.1 ± 0.1 | Actual average years of training ranged from 3.9 to 5.9 years | SI only | |||||
| Actual average hours of training per week ranged from 5.2 to 9.4 h | |||||||
| Actual average MVPA(min/day) ranged from 85.0 to 119.8 | Actual average MVPA(min/day) ~83.2 | ||||||
| Gomez-Bruton Spain Clubs and high schools | Cross-sectional study within a larger randomized controlled trial | Total | Sport (swimming) duration >3 years, minimum of 6 h/week | Controls: normo-active with no participation in sports like swimming or aquatics regularly and no sporting activities more 3 h/week | QUS heel (non-dominant) | Lunar Achilles Insight (Achilles Insight, GE Health- care), Diegem, Belgium | cQUS results showed no significant differences between swimmers and controls; |
| Aged 11–18 | Competing in regional tournaments | SI, SOS, BUA | |||||
| Madic et al. Serbia Schools | Observational | Total | Sport duration >1 year | Control 90 min of PA/week at school | Both heels QUS | Sahara (Hologic, Inc., MA, USA) sonometer | Higher BUA and SOS Soccer players than controls |
| Aged 10–12 | SOS Left and right | ||||||
| Actual average hours of training per week ranged from 10 to 15 h | BUA Left and right | ||||||
| Yung et al. China Local university students | Cross sectional study | Total | Sport (swimming, dancing, soccer) duration >2 years; at least twice week for at least 2 h | Control no exercise (sedentary control) | QUS heel dominant and non-dominant heel measured, analysis on dominant heel | Paris, Norland Medical System, Fort Atkinson, WI, USA | All QUS parameters showed a significant linear increasing with the weight bearing and high impact exercise |
| Aged 18–22 | VOS, BUA, SI | BUA, VOS, SI Soccer players > dancers > swimmers > sedentary control group | |||||
| n = 15 no exercise/sedentary control group | |||||||
| Mentzel et al. Germany Regional sports schools | Cross-sectional study | Total | Sport duration undetermined; two training sessions/week of at least 90 min | Reference population used (age, size, and gender related) | Both heel (mean) QUS | Sahara (Hologic, Inc., Waltham, MA, USA) sonar | |
| Aged 11–18 ( | SOS (SDS) and BUA (SDS) | ||||||
| For the level of activity: significant correlation to BUA only judokas and wrestlers | |||||||
| For training sessions: SOS low negative correlation and BUA-positive correlation | |||||||
| Nurmi-Lawton England Clubs | Mixed longitudinal 3 years/cross-sectional for mothers | Total | Sport duration average for 6 years, two or more 90-min training sessions weekly; trained >10 h/week; competed at club or regional level | Normo-active sedentary controls including walking to school and attended school PE classes | QUS heel | Contact Ultra- Sound Bone Analyser (CUBA; McCue Ultrasonic Ltd., Winchester, UK) | Gymnasts had up to 24–51% higher BMC and 13–28% higher BMD, depending on skeletal site than controls. |
| Age Baseline 8–17 years of age | Mean of both feet, measured twice | ||||||
| No sports training requiring year-round training; included two competitive swimmers as they were engaged in an activity the authors considered non-weight-bearing | |||||||
Figure 1Flowchart of the literature search and the study selection process.
Risk of bias (NOS).
| How well-described is recruitment of the exposed group? | Chinese University students—numbers approached not stated | Gymnasts recruited from five clubs—numbers approached not stated | Source of recruits was local swimming clubs and numbers approached/recruited provided | Recruited from College of Physical education—numbers approached not stated | Unclear—numbers approached not stated | Provided in separate referenced article; sports recruited were swimming/ football/cycling. Recruits came from sports club and schools |
| How were the exposed group selected? | At least 4 h sport each week for at least 2 years; different sports described | At least 10 h per week and competing in competitions. | Swimmers training for at least 3 years, training for a minimum of 6 h per week. Group subdivided according to whether participants were also training in another sport | At least 90 min per week | Soccer training for 10–15 h weekly for at least 1 year | Training for over 3 h per week for 3 or more years. Level of training provided for cases |
| How well-described is recruitment of the control group? | Chinese University students | Local schools; taking part in PE lessons only though 2 were competitive swimmers | Source of recruits was local schools and numbers approached/ recruited provided. Could not be doing any sport for more than 3 h per week | Used local reference data—exposure to sport in this group was unclear | “Not engaged in active sport.” Other details not provided | Provided in separate referenced article |
| Length of exposure to sporting activity | Variable between duration and time/week in different sports. Typically 2–3 years, range 7–15 h per week | Training for range of 2–12 years; average 6.5 years | At least 3 years | Unclear | At least 1 year | Range 4–6 years |
| Information on important confounders | Provided | Provided | Provided | Unclear | Unclear | Provided |
| Overall risk of bias | Moderate | Low | Low | High | Moderate | Low |