Back,ground To examine the role of long-term swimming exercise on regional
and total body bone mineral density (BMD) in men.
Methods. Experimental design: Cross-sectional. Setting: Musculoskeletal res
earch laboratory at a medical center, Participants:We compared elite colleg
iate swimmers (n=11) to age-, weight-, and height-matched non-athletic cont
rols (n=11), Measures: BMD (g/cm(2)) of the lumbar spine L2-4, proximal fem
ur (femoral neck, trochanter, Ward's triangle), total body and various subr
egions of the total body, as well as regional and total body fat and bone m
ineral-free lean mass (LM) was assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry
(DXA, Hologic QDR 1000/W).
Results. Swimmers, who commenced training at 10.7+/-3.7 yrs (mean+/-SD) and
trained for 24.7+/-4.2 hrs per week, had a greater amount of LM (p<0.05),
lower fat mass (p<0.001) and percent body fat (9.5 vs 16.2 %, p<0.001) than
controls. There was no significant difference between groups for regional
or total body BRID, In stepwise multiple regression analysis, body weight w
as a consistent independent predictor of regional and total body BMD,
Conclusions. These results suggest that long-term swimming is not an osteog
enic mode of training in college-aged males. This supports our previous fin
dings in young female swimmers who displayed no bone mass benefits despite
long-standing athletic training.