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Jumping Mechanography: Reference Centiles in Childhood and Introduction of the Nerve-Muscle Index to Quantify Motor Efficiency.

Kyriakos MartakisUte AlexyChristina StarkAndreas HahnRainer RawerIbrahim DuranEckhard Schönau
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2023)
Jumping mechanography provides robust motor function indicators among children. The study aim was to develop centiles for the single 2-leg jump (S2LJ) in German children and adolescents and to identify differences in children with obesity. Data were collected in 2004-2021 through the German DOrtmund Nutritional and Anthropometric Longitudinally Designed (DONALD) study. All participants (6-18 years, mean age 11.4) performed annually an S2LJ aiming for maximum height on a Ground Reaction Force Platform. LMS (lambda-mu-sigma), including resampling, was used to develop centiles for velocity (v max ), jump height (h max ), relative force (F max /BW), relative power (P max /mass), impulse asymmetry and a new parameter to describe jump efficiency, the Nerve-Muscle Index (NMI), defined as v max /(F max /BW). Data from 882 children and adolescents were analyzed (3062 measurements, median 3 per individual). In females, F max /BW values were higher in younger age but remained constant in adolescence. v max , h max and P max /mass increased in childhood, reaching a plateau in adolescence. In males, v max , h max and P max /mass showed a constant increase and the F max /BW remained lower. Children with obesity showed lower F max /BW, h max , v max and the NMI, hence, lower velocity per relative force unit and less efficient jump. The centiles should be used to monitor motor development in childhood. The NMI is a surrogate for motor efficiency.
Keyphrases
  • birth weight
  • metabolic syndrome
  • type diabetes
  • body mass index
  • weight loss
  • skeletal muscle
  • weight gain
  • high throughput
  • big data
  • body composition
  • blood flow