Daily School Physical Activity from before to after Puberty Improves Bone Mass and a Musculoskeletal Composite Risk Score for Fracture
Open Access
- 28 March 2020
- Vol. 8 (4), 40
- https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8040040
Abstract
This 7.5-year prospective controlled exercise intervention study assessed if daily school physical activity (PA), from before to after puberty, improved musculoskeletal traits. There were 63 boys and 34 girls in the intervention group (40 min PA/day), and 26 boys and 17 girls in the control group (60 min PA/week). We measured musculoskeletal traits at the start and end of the study. The overall musculoskeletal effect of PA was also estimated by a composite score (mean Z-score of the lumbar spine bone mineral content (BMC), bone area (BA), total body lean mass (TBLM), calcaneal ultrasound (speed of sound (SOS)), and muscle strength (knee flexion peak torque)). We used analyses of covariance (ANCOVA) for group comparisons. Compared to the gender-matched control group, intervention boys reached higher gains in BMC, BA, muscle strength, as well as in the composite score, and intervention girls higher gains in BMC, BA, SOS, as well as in the composite score (all p < 0.05, respectively). Our small sample study indicates that a daily school-based PA intervention program from Tanner stage 1 to 5 in both sexes is associated with greater bone mineral accrual, greater gain in bone size, and a greater gain in a musculoskeletal composite score for fractures.Keywords
Funding Information
- The Swedish Research Council for Sport Science (2014, 2019, 2018, 2018)
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prevention of falls in the elderly: A reviewScandinavian Journal of Public Health, 2013
- Inferior physical performance test results of 10,998 men in the MrOS Study is associated with high fracture riskAge and Ageing, 2012
- A school-curriculum-based exercise intervention program for two years in pre-pubertal girls does not influence hip structureDynamic Medicine, 2008
- FRAX™ and the assessment of fracture probability in men and women from the UKOsteoporosis International, 2008
- The Effect of Exercise on Bone Mass and Structural Geometry during GrowthPublished by S. Karger AG ,2007
- Association Between Bone Mass and Fractures in Children: A Prospective Cohort StudyJournal of Bone and Mineral Research, 2006
- Costs and quality of life associated with osteoporosis-related fractures in SwedenOsteoporosis International, 2005
- “Bounce at the Bell”: a novel program of short bouts of exercise improves proximal femur bone mass in early pubertal childrenBritish Journal of Sports Medicine, 2005
- Effects of resistance training on bone mineral content and density in adolescent femalesCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1996
- Clinical longitudinal standards for height, weight, height velocity, weight velocity, and stages of puberty.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1976