Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities. / Ørntoft, Christina; Larsen, Malte Nejst; Madsen, Mads; Sandager, Lene; Lundager, Ida; Møller, Andreas; Hansen, Lone; Madsen, Esben Elholm; Elbe, Anne-Marie; Ottesen, Laila; Krustrup, Peter.

I: BioMed Research International, Bind 2018, 9807569, 2018.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ørntoft, C, Larsen, MN, Madsen, M, Sandager, L, Lundager, I, Møller, A, Hansen, L, Madsen, EE, Elbe, A-M, Ottesen, L & Krustrup, P 2018, 'Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities', BioMed Research International, bind 2018, 9807569. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9807569

APA

Ørntoft, C., Larsen, M. N., Madsen, M., Sandager, L., Lundager, I., Møller, A., Hansen, L., Madsen, E. E., Elbe, A-M., Ottesen, L., & Krustrup, P. (2018). Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities. BioMed Research International, 2018, [9807569]. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9807569

Vancouver

Ørntoft C, Larsen MN, Madsen M, Sandager L, Lundager I, Møller A o.a. Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities. BioMed Research International. 2018;2018. 9807569. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9807569

Author

Ørntoft, Christina ; Larsen, Malte Nejst ; Madsen, Mads ; Sandager, Lene ; Lundager, Ida ; Møller, Andreas ; Hansen, Lone ; Madsen, Esben Elholm ; Elbe, Anne-Marie ; Ottesen, Laila ; Krustrup, Peter. / Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities. I: BioMed Research International. 2018 ; Bind 2018.

Bibtex

@article{b67216d4ec284b47be4db42fd3af81af,
title = "Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities",
abstract = "This study investigated whether the physical fitness and body composition of 10-12-year-old Danish children are related to participation in leisure-time club-based sporting activities. The study involved 544 Danish 10-12-year-old 5th-grade municipal schoolchildren (269 boys and 275 girls, 11.1 ± 0.4 years). After answering a questionnaire about leisure-time sporting activities, the children were divided into four groups: football club participation (FC; n=141), other ball games (OBG; n=42), other sports (OS; n=194), and no sports-club participation (NSC; n=167). The children completed a battery of health and fitness tests, including a 20 m sprint test, a standing long-jump test, the Yo-Yo IR1 children's test (YYIR1C), and body composition, blood pressure, resting heart rate (HRrest), and the flamingo balance test. The children engaged in club-based ball games (FC and OBG) had higher (p<0.05) lean body mass than NSC (FC: 17.5 ± 2.9; OBG: 18.4 ± 2.6; OS: 16.7 ± 2.9; NSC: 16.4 ± 2.8 kg), performed better (p<0.05) in the YYIR1C test (FC: 1083 ± 527; OBG: 968 ± 448; OS: 776 ± 398; NSC: 687 ± 378 m), and had lower (p<0.05) %HRmax after 1, 2, and 3 min of YYIR1C. Moreover, HRrest was lower (p<0.05) for FC than for OS and NSC (FC: 68 ± 9 vs OS: 72 ± 10 and NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm), and lower (p<0.05) for OBG than for NSC (OBG: 70 ± 10 vs NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm). This study found that 10-12-year-old Danish children engaged in club-based football and other ball games had better exercise capacity, lower resting heart rate, and higher muscle mass than children not engaged in leisure-time sports. Thus, participation in club-based leisure-time ball-game activities seems to be of importance for the fitness and health profile of prepubertal children.",
author = "Christina {\O}rntoft and Larsen, {Malte Nejst} and Mads Madsen and Lene Sandager and Ida Lundager and Andreas M{\o}ller and Lone Hansen and Madsen, {Esben Elholm} and Anne-Marie Elbe and Laila Ottesen and Peter Krustrup",
note = "CURIS 2018 NEXS 441",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1155/2018/9807569",
language = "English",
volume = "2018",
journal = "BioMed Research International",
issn = "2314-6133",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical fitness and body composition in 10-12-year-old Danish children in relation to leisure-time club-based sporting activities

AU - Ørntoft, Christina

AU - Larsen, Malte Nejst

AU - Madsen, Mads

AU - Sandager, Lene

AU - Lundager, Ida

AU - Møller, Andreas

AU - Hansen, Lone

AU - Madsen, Esben Elholm

AU - Elbe, Anne-Marie

AU - Ottesen, Laila

AU - Krustrup, Peter

N1 - CURIS 2018 NEXS 441

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This study investigated whether the physical fitness and body composition of 10-12-year-old Danish children are related to participation in leisure-time club-based sporting activities. The study involved 544 Danish 10-12-year-old 5th-grade municipal schoolchildren (269 boys and 275 girls, 11.1 ± 0.4 years). After answering a questionnaire about leisure-time sporting activities, the children were divided into four groups: football club participation (FC; n=141), other ball games (OBG; n=42), other sports (OS; n=194), and no sports-club participation (NSC; n=167). The children completed a battery of health and fitness tests, including a 20 m sprint test, a standing long-jump test, the Yo-Yo IR1 children's test (YYIR1C), and body composition, blood pressure, resting heart rate (HRrest), and the flamingo balance test. The children engaged in club-based ball games (FC and OBG) had higher (p<0.05) lean body mass than NSC (FC: 17.5 ± 2.9; OBG: 18.4 ± 2.6; OS: 16.7 ± 2.9; NSC: 16.4 ± 2.8 kg), performed better (p<0.05) in the YYIR1C test (FC: 1083 ± 527; OBG: 968 ± 448; OS: 776 ± 398; NSC: 687 ± 378 m), and had lower (p<0.05) %HRmax after 1, 2, and 3 min of YYIR1C. Moreover, HRrest was lower (p<0.05) for FC than for OS and NSC (FC: 68 ± 9 vs OS: 72 ± 10 and NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm), and lower (p<0.05) for OBG than for NSC (OBG: 70 ± 10 vs NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm). This study found that 10-12-year-old Danish children engaged in club-based football and other ball games had better exercise capacity, lower resting heart rate, and higher muscle mass than children not engaged in leisure-time sports. Thus, participation in club-based leisure-time ball-game activities seems to be of importance for the fitness and health profile of prepubertal children.

AB - This study investigated whether the physical fitness and body composition of 10-12-year-old Danish children are related to participation in leisure-time club-based sporting activities. The study involved 544 Danish 10-12-year-old 5th-grade municipal schoolchildren (269 boys and 275 girls, 11.1 ± 0.4 years). After answering a questionnaire about leisure-time sporting activities, the children were divided into four groups: football club participation (FC; n=141), other ball games (OBG; n=42), other sports (OS; n=194), and no sports-club participation (NSC; n=167). The children completed a battery of health and fitness tests, including a 20 m sprint test, a standing long-jump test, the Yo-Yo IR1 children's test (YYIR1C), and body composition, blood pressure, resting heart rate (HRrest), and the flamingo balance test. The children engaged in club-based ball games (FC and OBG) had higher (p<0.05) lean body mass than NSC (FC: 17.5 ± 2.9; OBG: 18.4 ± 2.6; OS: 16.7 ± 2.9; NSC: 16.4 ± 2.8 kg), performed better (p<0.05) in the YYIR1C test (FC: 1083 ± 527; OBG: 968 ± 448; OS: 776 ± 398; NSC: 687 ± 378 m), and had lower (p<0.05) %HRmax after 1, 2, and 3 min of YYIR1C. Moreover, HRrest was lower (p<0.05) for FC than for OS and NSC (FC: 68 ± 9 vs OS: 72 ± 10 and NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm), and lower (p<0.05) for OBG than for NSC (OBG: 70 ± 10 vs NSC: 75 ± 10 bpm). This study found that 10-12-year-old Danish children engaged in club-based football and other ball games had better exercise capacity, lower resting heart rate, and higher muscle mass than children not engaged in leisure-time sports. Thus, participation in club-based leisure-time ball-game activities seems to be of importance for the fitness and health profile of prepubertal children.

U2 - 10.1155/2018/9807569

DO - 10.1155/2018/9807569

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30687761

VL - 2018

JO - BioMed Research International

JF - BioMed Research International

SN - 2314-6133

M1 - 9807569

ER -

ID: 212909351