Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.

The aim of this study was to establish maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentile reference values of young elite athletes from various sports. Anthropometric (i.e., standing and sitting body height, body mass, body mass index) and physical fitness (i.e., coun...

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Main Authors: Melanie Lesinski, Alina Schmelcher, Michael Herz, Christian Puta, Holger Gabriel, Adamantios Arampatzis, Gunnar Laube, Dirk Büsch, Urs Granacher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237423
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spelling doaj-6f7f4fdc41e041e2a60144704217cda52021-03-03T22:00:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023742310.1371/journal.pone.0237423Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.Melanie LesinskiAlina SchmelcherMichael HerzChristian PutaHolger GabrielAdamantios ArampatzisGunnar LaubeDirk BüschUrs GranacherThe aim of this study was to establish maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentile reference values of young elite athletes from various sports. Anthropometric (i.e., standing and sitting body height, body mass, body mass index) and physical fitness (i.e., countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction speed [i.e., T-test], trunk muscle endurance [i.e., ventral Bourban test], dynamic lower limbs balance [i.e., Y-balance test], hand grip strength) of 703 male and female elite young athletes aged 8-18 years were collected to aggregate reference values according to maturation, age, and sex. Findings indicate that body height and mass were significantly higher (p<0.001; 0.95≤d≤1.74) in more compared to less mature young athletes as well as with increasing chronological age (p<0.05; 0.66≤d≤3.13). Furthermore, male young athletes were significantly taller and heavier compared to their female counterparts (p<0.001; 0.34≤d≤0.50). In terms of physical fitness, post-pubertal athletes showed better countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength performances (p<0.001; 1.57≤d≤8.72) compared to pubertal athletes. Further, countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength performances increased with increasing chronological age (p<0.05; 0.29≤d≤4.13). In addition, male athletes outperformed their female counterpart in the countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength (p<0.05; 0.17≤d≤0.76). Significant age by sex interactions indicate that sex-specific differences were even more pronounced with increasing age. Conclusively, body height, body mass, and physical fitness increased with increasing maturational status and chronological age. Sex-specific differences appear to be larger as youth grow older. Practitioners can use the percentile values as approximate benchmarks for talent identification and development.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237423
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melanie Lesinski
Alina Schmelcher
Michael Herz
Christian Puta
Holger Gabriel
Adamantios Arampatzis
Gunnar Laube
Dirk Büsch
Urs Granacher
spellingShingle Melanie Lesinski
Alina Schmelcher
Michael Herz
Christian Puta
Holger Gabriel
Adamantios Arampatzis
Gunnar Laube
Dirk Büsch
Urs Granacher
Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Melanie Lesinski
Alina Schmelcher
Michael Herz
Christian Puta
Holger Gabriel
Adamantios Arampatzis
Gunnar Laube
Dirk Büsch
Urs Granacher
author_sort Melanie Lesinski
title Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
title_short Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
title_full Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
title_fullStr Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
title_full_unstemmed Maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of German elite young athletes.
title_sort maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentiles of german elite young athletes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The aim of this study was to establish maturation-, age-, and sex-specific anthropometric and physical fitness percentile reference values of young elite athletes from various sports. Anthropometric (i.e., standing and sitting body height, body mass, body mass index) and physical fitness (i.e., countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction speed [i.e., T-test], trunk muscle endurance [i.e., ventral Bourban test], dynamic lower limbs balance [i.e., Y-balance test], hand grip strength) of 703 male and female elite young athletes aged 8-18 years were collected to aggregate reference values according to maturation, age, and sex. Findings indicate that body height and mass were significantly higher (p<0.001; 0.95≤d≤1.74) in more compared to less mature young athletes as well as with increasing chronological age (p<0.05; 0.66≤d≤3.13). Furthermore, male young athletes were significantly taller and heavier compared to their female counterparts (p<0.001; 0.34≤d≤0.50). In terms of physical fitness, post-pubertal athletes showed better countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength performances (p<0.001; 1.57≤d≤8.72) compared to pubertal athletes. Further, countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength performances increased with increasing chronological age (p<0.05; 0.29≤d≤4.13). In addition, male athletes outperformed their female counterpart in the countermovement jump, drop jump, change-of-direction, and handgrip strength (p<0.05; 0.17≤d≤0.76). Significant age by sex interactions indicate that sex-specific differences were even more pronounced with increasing age. Conclusively, body height, body mass, and physical fitness increased with increasing maturational status and chronological age. Sex-specific differences appear to be larger as youth grow older. Practitioners can use the percentile values as approximate benchmarks for talent identification and development.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237423
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