Contribution of High School Sport Participation to Young Adult Bone Strength

INTRODUCTIONNearly 8 million American adolescents participate in sports. Participation declines in young adulthood. PURPOSEThis study assessed longitudinal effects of high school sport participation and muscle power on young adult bone strength. METHODSTwo hundred twenty-eight young adults from the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicine and science in sports and exercise 2019-05, Vol.51 (5), p.1064-1072
Hauptverfasser: WARD, RYAN C, JANZ, KATHLEEN F, LETUCHY, ELENA M, PETERSON, CLAYTON, LEVY, STEVEN M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:INTRODUCTIONNearly 8 million American adolescents participate in sports. Participation declines in young adulthood. PURPOSEThis study assessed longitudinal effects of high school sport participation and muscle power on young adult bone strength. METHODSTwo hundred twenty-eight young adults from the Iowa Bone Development Study completed an interscholastic sport participation questionnaire. Current physical activity (PA) behaviors were assessed via questionnaire. Dual x-ray absorptiometry assessed hip areal bone mineral density and was used with hip structure analysis to estimate femoral neck section modulus and hip cross-sectional area. Peripheral quantitative computed tomography provided strength-strain index and bone strength index at 38% and 4% midshaft tibial sites, respectively. Vertical jump estimated muscle power at 17 yr. Sex-specific multiple linear regression predicted young adult bone outcomes based on sport participation groups. Mediation analysis analyzed the effects of muscle power on relationships between sport participation and bone strength. RESULTSAt follow-up, males participating in any interscholastic sport had greater bone strength than males who did not participate in sport. The explained variability in bone outcomes was 2% to 16%. Females who participated in sports requiring muscle power had greater bone strength than females who did not participate in sports or females who participated in nonpower sports (explained variability was 4%–10%). Muscle power mediated 24.7% to 41% of the effect of sport participation on bone outcomes in males and 19.4% to 30% in females. CONCLUSIONSFormer male interscholastic sport participants and female interscholastic power sport participants have stronger bones than peers even when adjusting for current PA. Muscle power did not fully explain differences in all bone outcomes, suggesting that sport participation has additional bone health benefits.
ISSN:0195-9131
1530-0315
DOI:10.1249/MSS.0000000000001870