Zee Media Bureau
New Delhi: Toddlers, especially boys, who start walking at an early age are more likely to have stronger bones and eventually become muscular.
These movements in toddlers place a stress on the bones, causing them to become wider and thicker, thereby making them stronger than those in children who may not be moving as much, the study said.
The findings from the study may help to identify who is at a greater risk of osteoporosis and bone fractures in later life.
"The findings are intriguing as they provide a link which wasn't previously understood, primarily that how we move as a young child can have ramifications for our bone strength even 16 years later,” said lead researcher Alex Ireland from Manchester Metropolitan University in Britain.
"Being more active gives you stronger muscles which can then apply bigger forces to the bones as we walk, run or jump, helping to strengthen bones as we grow older," he added in the paper published in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research.
(With IANS inputs)
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