Stretching exercises for growing children: evaluation of obesity, flexibility, pain and injury of musculoskeletal organs before and one year later / Journal of Rural Medicine
Journal of Rural Medicine
; : 150-157, 2024.
Article
em En
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-1040013
Biblioteca responsável:
WPRO
ABSTRACT
Objective: Rapid bone development in growing children causes excessive tension in the lower extremities’ muscles and tendons, leading to reduced flexibility and increased musculoskeletal disorder risk. Further, lack of exercise causes obesity. Therefore, we created a stretching exercise protocol to prevent musculoskeletal disorders in elementary school (middle and upper grades) children during their growth period, when rapid bone development begins.Patients and Methods: We examined the effects on pain, injury, and flexibility. Fifty-three (boys: 34, girls: 19) students in grades 3–5 (ages 9–11) performed the stretching exercises at school thrice a week for one year, and we compared the results before and a year after the intervention.Results: A three-minute stretching exercise routine achieved an intensity of 4.6–4.9 metabolic equivalents (METs; equivalent to brisk walking). Obesity (P=1.000), flexibility problems (inability to bend forward [P=0.754] or squat problems [P=1.000]), bone/joint pain (P=1.000), and injury (P=1.000) did not significantly increase.Conclusion: Stretching exercises during the growth period may help prevent childhood musculoskeletal disorders, obesity, and flexibility loss.
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Base de dados:
WPRIM
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Journal of Rural Medicine
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article