Abstract

BackgroundGymnastics training enhances the development of postural control in children and adolescents. In competitive gymnastics, the training regimen is specific to the given gymnastic discipline and is usually followed from the early years of practicing. This study aimed to determine whether postural steadiness differed between young gymnasts practicing two distinct disciplines, and whether it was related to the duration of their training experience, age, and their anthropometric characteristics.MethodsThirty 10–13-year-old females ̶ ten artistic gymnasts, ten acrobatic gymnasts (training as “tops”), and ten non-athletes ̶ were examined during 60-s quiet standing trials on a force platform with the eyes open and closed. Their postural sway was represented by directional components of centre of foot pressure mean velocity. Mann-Whitney U, Wilcoxon and Spearman’s ρ tests were used for analyses.ResultsAnterior-posterior and medial-lateral centre of foot pressure mean velocities were not different between the artistic and acrobatic gymnasts (p > 0.05). In the artistic gymnasts, the duration of training experience, age, body height, body mass, and maturity offset were negatively correlated with the anterior-posterior centre of foot pressure mean velocity under eyes-open conditions. The acrobatic gymnasts’ body mass and BMI percentiles were negatively correlated with their anterior-posterior and medial-lateral centre of foot pressure mean velocities under both visual conditions (r ranged from − 0.64 to − 0.93; p < 0.05). The non-athletes’ centre of foot pressure mean velocities were non-significantly correlated with their age and anthropometric measures under both visual conditions (p > 0.05).ConclusionsThe artistic gymnasts’ longer training experience, greater age, body height, body mass, and biological maturity were associated with better anterior-posterior postural steadiness when vision was available; the acrobatic gymnasts’ greater body mass and BMI percentiles were associated with better overall postural steadiness regardless of visual conditions. Relationships were observed between postural steadiness and discipline-specific training experience and anthropometric characteristics; however, causes and effects were not proven.

Highlights

  • Gymnastics training enhances the development of postural control in children and adolescents

  • It has been documented that practicing gymnastic disciplines since early years of life enhances the development of postural control [1,2,3,4]

  • The young untrained females in the present study demonstrated age and biological maturity similar to that of the gymnasts, they were characterized by their greater body height, mass and Body mass index (BMI) percentiles, and larger diversity of their anthropometric characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

Gymnastics training enhances the development of postural control in children and adolescents. It has been documented that practicing gymnastic disciplines since early years of life enhances the development of postural control [1,2,3,4]. One of the methods used in the assessment of upright standing postural control is force-platform posturography. This method enables the analysis of centre of foot pressure (COP) oscillations which are related to postural sway. Standing without visual cues challenges the postural control system and leads to increased postural sway; various human populations may use their redundant system differently to adapt to such conditions [5]

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