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Exercise
Boosts Teen Girls' Bones
Exercise, not calcium, may have
the strongest effect on growing bones in adolescent girls, researchers
report.
In a decade-long study, calcium
intake was not related to bone growth or bone strength in young
women. But physical exercise was related to stronger bones, according
to a report in the June issue of the Journal of Pediatrics.
"Exercise is the most important
modifiable determinant of bone development for young women," Dr.
Tom Lloyd of Penn State University College of Medicine in Hershey
stated. "At least 15 percent of the variation in bone strength
seen among healthy women can be attributed to exercise."
Exercise is probably the most important
influence on bone development in young men, too, Lloyd said, but
the study included only young women.
Despite the apparent importance
of exercise, teens should not skimp on calcium-rich foods, according
to Lloyd.
"I believe that parents should
continue to encourage teens to consume low-fat dairy products
since they are convenient and are wonderful sources of macronutrients,
minerals and vitamins," Lloyd said.
The study included 80 young white
women who were followed for 10 years. When the study began, the
girls were around 12 years old, and none had begun menstruating.
One of the study's goals was to measure the effects of calcium
intake, exercise and oral contraceptives on bone health.
"This study is unique in that the
participants have been followed for over a decade, with measurements
made every 6 months for the first 4 years and yearly thereafter,"
Lloyd said.
What the study found was that calcium
intake, which ranged from 500 milligrams (mg) to 1,900 mg per
day, was not significantly associated with bone growth or bone
density.
"We have the most comprehensive
dataset of calcium intake throughout adolescence of teen women
extant and are therefore confident about noting that over the
calcium intake ranges of our cohort, there was no significant
relationship to bone development," Lloyd said.
The study also showed that the
use of oral contraceptives was not related to bone health. Despite
some research that has found that women on oral contraceptives
have thinner bones, young women who had taken the Pill had just
as healthy bones as those who had not taken oral contraceptives.
But exercise was related to bone
health. The more a teen girl participated in sports, the stronger
were her bones, according to the report. The results of the study
support other research showing that exercise during the teen years
can have a significant effect on bones.
"Regular load-bearing exercise,
like walking 30 minutes a day, has a positive effect on bone development,"
Lloyd said.
Although the brittle-bone disease
osteoporosis does not usually strike until late in life, the teen
years are an essential time for bone development. In fact, girls
form 40 percent of their bone mass during adolescence.
SOURCE: Journal of Pediatrics,
June 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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