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Pelvic region bone density, soft tissue mass, and injury frequency in female professional ballet dancers and soccer athletes. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study found that female professional ballet dancers have significantly lower pelvic bone mineral density (BMD) compared to both soccer players and the general female population.
  • The analysis involved assessing BMD in specific pelvic regions (like the ischium and sacrum) and revealed that ballet dancers are at a higher risk for injuries due to their lower BMD and lean mass.
  • The results suggest that targeted strength training and nutritional improvements could help prevent injuries in these dancers.

Article Abstract

We recently observed a high prevalence of low pelvic bone mineral density (BMD) in female professional ballet performers. Because this population is susceptible to musculoskeletal overuse injuries, we aimed to determine which regions of the pelvis may be at greatest risk compared to general population females (GENPOP) as well as professional female soccer players (SOCCER, a comparison to other elite athletes regularly subjected to high degrees of loading). Three groups of age-matched females [(GENPOP; = 38, 27±1yrs), (BALLET; single company, = 36, 26±3yrs), (SOCCER; single NWSL® club, = 34, 25±1yrs)] consented to have their BMD and body composition assessed (DEXA, GE®). In addition to soft tissue and total and regional BMD analyses, a segmental analysis of the pelvis was performed to determine site-specific BMD for the iliac fossa, iliac fossa/iliac crest/ilium combined, pubic bone, ischium, and sacrum. A mixed-model ANOVA followed by a Tukey's post-hoc test was used to compare the groups (Type-I error; = 0.05). The BALLET group had lower pelvic BMD for all measures (. = 15%-27%, <0.001) compared to the SOCCER group and for the ischium (.= 8%; =0.007) and sacrum (Avg. ​= ​7%; = 0.028) compared to the GENPOP group. The BALLET group had lower lean mass for all measures compared to the other groups ( = 12%-18%; < 0.01). Professional ballet performers exhibit reduced pelvic region soft tissue and site-specific BMD not previously detected using standard DEXA analyses. These findings highlight which pelvic regions may benefit from preventative strength training and/or nutritional interventions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9219303PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.smhs.2021.08.002DOI Listing

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