Ferreira Francisco A, Santos Catarina C, Palmeira António L, Fernandes Ricardo J, Costa Mário J
Centre of Research, Education, Innovation and Intervention in Sport (CIFI2D), Faculty of Sport, University of Porto, 4050-450 Porto, Portugal.
Porto Biomechanics Laboratory (LABIOMEP), Faculty of Sport, University of Porto, 4050-450 Porto, Portugal.
J Funct Morphol Kinesiol. 2024 Sep 4;9(3):158. doi: 10.3390/jfmk9030158.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Swimming is a popular and cost-effective way to prevent sedentary behavior and improve physical conditioning and health during early adolescence. However, information on its impact and benefits on daily life activities is lacking. This systematic review aims to summarize the chronic effects of swimming on physical conditioning and physical health outcomes in early adolescents.
The PRISMA 2020 guidelines were followed and PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and International Symposium of Biomechanics and Medicine in Swimming proceedings databases were searched. Eligibility criteria were defined on the PICOS framework (healthy adolescents in early puberty, swimming programmes or training, passive or active control groups, general effects on physical conditioning or health, longitudinal) and risk of bias was assessed using RoBANS 2.
From 2365 records, 20 non-randomized studies met the defined criteria. High heterogeneity in sample size and intervention was observed. While studies related to physical conditioning ( = 5) focused on physiological variables and muscular function, the evidence regarding physical health outcomes ( = 15) explored bone accrual, haemodynamics, body composition, musculoskeletal system, and lung growth. High overall risk of bias (70%) was observed due to strict criteria.
Swimming exercise seems to improve cardiorespiratory fitness, cardiac output, haemodynamics, heart growth, motor performance, and body composition of early adolescents. Despite clear evidence that exists on these chronic effects, research on bone health, postural deficit, motor skills, and sleep quality is still missing.
背景/目的:游泳是一种流行且经济高效的方式,可预防青少年早期的久坐行为,并改善身体状况和健康。然而,关于其对日常生活活动的影响和益处的信息却很缺乏。本系统评价旨在总结游泳对青少年早期身体状况和身体健康结果的长期影响。
遵循PRISMA 2020指南,检索了PubMed、Scopus、Web of Science以及游泳生物力学与医学国际研讨会论文数据库。在PICOS框架(青春期早期健康青少年、游泳计划或训练、被动或主动对照组、对身体状况或健康的总体影响、纵向研究)上定义了纳入标准,并使用RoBANS 2评估偏倚风险。
从2365条记录中,有20项非随机研究符合既定标准。观察到样本量和干预措施存在高度异质性。虽然与身体状况相关的研究(n = 5)侧重于生理变量和肌肉功能,但关于身体健康结果的证据(n = 15)探讨了骨量积累、血液动力学、身体成分、肌肉骨骼系统和肺生长。由于标准严格,观察到总体偏倚风险较高(70%)。
游泳锻炼似乎能改善青少年早期的心肺适能、心输出量、血液动力学、心脏生长、运动表现和身体成分。尽管在这些长期影响方面有明确证据,但关于骨骼健康、姿势缺陷、运动技能和睡眠质量的研究仍然缺失。