Association of Sport Participation and Calcium Intake with Bone Mineral Density in Children and Adolescents: A Cross-Sectional Study
Carla Caffarelli, Caterina Mondillo, Guido Cavati, Alessandro Versienti, Anna Lora, Sara Gonnelli, Stefano Gonnelli, Luigi Gennari, Antonella Al Refaie

TL;DR
This study finds that soccer improves bone density in children's hips more than other activities, suggesting sport type matters for bone health.
Contribution
Demonstrates site-specific bone benefits of soccer versus other sports in youth through direct BMD comparisons.
Findings
Soccer players had significantly higher femoral neck and total femur BMD compared to dancers and controls.
Youth soccer players with fractures maintained normal BMD, unlike fractured dancers and controls.
Sport participation during pre-pubertal years enhances bone mineral acquisition site-specifically.
Abstract
Background: Sport participation has been shown to have a positive impact on bone mineral density (BMD) in children and adolescents. In fact, the type, intensity, and duration of sports activities may influence the magnitude of the effect on BMD. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of different sports on BMD in children and adolescents. Methods: We studied 90 children and adolescents (age 10.21 ± 2.96 years): 43 soccer players, 27 vocational dancers, and 20 active controls. In all subjects, bone mineral density at the lumbar spine (BMD-LS), at the femoral neck (BMD-FN), and at the total femur (BMD-TH) was measured. Moreover, their daily dietary calcium intake was assessed, and the presence of prior fractures was reported. Results: The values of the BMD-LS Z-score adjusted for height did not differ between the three groups: controls (BMD-LS Z-score values were 0.41 ± 1.26,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone health and osteoporosis research · Vitamin D Research Studies · Vitamin K Research Studies
