BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine (May 2023)

Lumbar spine bone mineral adaptation: cricket fast bowlers versus controls

  • William Johnson,
  • Peter Alway,
  • Katherine Brooke-Wavell,
  • Mark King,
  • Nicholas Peirce,
  • Nicola Crabtree,
  • Laura Keylock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2022-001481
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2

Abstract

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Objectives This study aims to evaluate the adaptation of the lumbar vertebrae in fast bowlers compared to controls and how this is associated with age.Methods 91 male fast bowlers and 84 male controls aged 14–24 years had between one and three annual anterior-posterior lumbar spine dual-energy-X-ray absorptiometry scans. Total (L1-L4) and regional ipsilateral and contralateral L3 and L4 (respective to bowling arm) bone mineral density and content (BMD/C) were derived. Multilevel models examined the differences in lumbar bone mineral trajectories between fast bowlers and controls.Results At L1-L4 BMC and BMD, and contralateral BMD sites, fast bowlers demonstrated a greater negative quadratic pattern to their accrual trajectories than controls. Fast bowlers had greater increases in BMC in L1-L4 between 14 and 24 years of 55% compared with controls (41%). Within vertebra, asymmetry was evident in all fast bowlers and increased by up to 13% in favour of the contralateral side.Conclusions Lumbar vertebral adaptation to fast bowling substantially increased with age, particularly on the contralateral side. The greatest accrual was during late adolescence and early adulthood, which may correspond with the increasing physiological demands of adult professional sport.