[职业芭蕾舞学生的舞蹈专项资格--政府古典芭蕾舞培训机构的考试]。

Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-25 DOI:10.1055/a-2277-8400
Tobias Almasi, Elisabeth Exner-Grave, Daniela Ohlendorf, David A Groneberg, Eileen M Wanke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:职业芭蕾舞预科学生在训练期间面临的身体压力堪比竞技体育。在竞技体育中,有强制性和约束性的能力测试,以确保成长中的运动员符合要求。在芭蕾舞中,开始训练前没有这种强制性考试。对于成年专业舞蹈演员,可以从舞蹈医学文献中分离出肌肉骨骼的理想状态。然而,只有少数研究描述了专业芭蕾舞预科生的肌肉骨骼特征。人们既不知道学生在什么年龄段应达到成人的理想测量值,也不知道与理想值有多大偏差才算正常。本研究旨在描述专业芭蕾舞预科生的社会人口学特征和肌肉骨骼特征,并讨论他们在多大程度上已经符合或偏离成年专业芭蕾舞演员的舞蹈特定资格标准:在这项研究中,约翰-克兰科学校(JCS)的 n = 414 名女生和 n = 192 名男生接受了经验丰富的骨科医生和舞蹈医生的诊治。他们的平均年龄为 13.9 岁(SD 3.5,5-22 岁不等)。医生询问了他们的病史(年龄、国籍、开始芭蕾舞/训练的时间),并对他们进行了体格检查(身高/体重;肩腰、脊柱、腰三角的对称性;骨盆倾斜;胫骨扭转;食指关节基部、脊柱、髋部、踝关节和大脚趾关节基部的活动范围)。随后,我们将这项研究的结果与之前一篇文章中从舞蹈医学文献中分离出来的成年专业芭蕾舞者的适宜性标准进行了比较:受试者来自 49 个不同的国家。34.6%的女性受试者(≥16 岁)身高在 165 至 170 厘米之间,33.3%的男性受试者(≥18 岁)身高在 178 至 185 厘米之间。45.0%的受试者体重偏轻(结论:体重偏轻的受试者在儿童中很常见):研究结果表明,职业芭蕾舞预科生符合成年职业芭蕾舞者的许多特征。年轻群体中的高数值表明,这是对芭蕾舞演员的特定选择。然而,并非所有学生都符合古典芭蕾舞专业的理论 "理想测量值"。在训练中应单独考虑这些解剖极限,以保护成长中的预备职业芭蕾舞者。芭蕾舞的特殊解剖学要求很高,尤其是体重偏轻的学生人数众多,这突出表明有必要在开始时进行强制性的能力测试,并在训练过程中进行定期检查,以避免补偿机制及其造成的损害,并筛查饮食失调和饮食行为失常。
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[Dance-specific eligibility of vocational ballet students - examinations at a governmental training institution for classical ballet].

Background: During their training, pre-professional ballet students are confronted with physical stresses comparable to those of competitive sports. In competitive sports, there are mandatory and binding aptitude tests to ensure that the growing athlete meets the requirements. In ballet, there are no such mandatory examinations preceding the start of training. For adult professional dancers, musculoskeletal ideals could be isolated from the dance medicine literature. However, only a few studies describe musculoskeletal characteristics of pre-professional ballet students. It is neither known at what age a student should meet the ideal measurements for an adult nor what deviations from the ideal can be considered normal. This study aims to describe sociodemographic and musculoskeletal characteristics of pre-professional ballet students and discusses to what extent they already meet or deviate from dance-specific eligibility criteria for adult professional ballet dancers.

Material and methods: In this study, n = 414 female and n = 192 male students of John Cranko School (JCS) were seen by an experienced orthopaedist and dance physician. Mean age was 13.9 years (SD 3.5, range 5-22 years). Their medical history was taken (age; nationality; start of ballet/training) and a physical examination was performed (height/weight; symmetry of shoulder girdle, spine, waist triangles; pelvic tilt; tibial torsion; range of motion of base of index finger joint, spine, hips, ankle and base of great toe joint). Subsequently, the results of this study were compared with suitability criteria for adult professional ballet dancers that had been isolated from the dance medicine literature for a previous article.

Results: Examinees were from 49 different nations. 34.6% of the female subjects (≥16 years) were between 165 and 170 cm and 33.3% of the male subjects (≥18 years) were between 178 and 185 cm tall. 45.0% of those examined showed low body weight (<10th percentile, BMI <18.5 kg/m²). The trunk of 61.0-84.8% of those examined was erect and symmetrical. 25.2% had scoliosis. Half (53.5%) were found to have a bilateral external rotation of the hips of at least 60°, and 68.7% had a bilateral internal rotation between 20 and 50°. 87.3% exhibited a bilateral tibial torsion between 15 and 40°. A bilateral en dehors of 90° was calculated for 25.0%. In 9.1% of those examined, the upper ankle joints presented a dorsiflexion of at least 25°, and in 70.2%, a plantarflexion of at least 70° was seen. In 88.0%, the metatarsophalangeal joint of the great toe was 90° (f) and 80° (m) on both sides.

Conclusion: The results of this study showed that pre-professional ballet students fulfil many characteristics of adult professional ballet dancers. High values already among young age groups suggest a ballet-specific selection. Nevertheless, not all students fulfil the theoretical "ideal measurements" for professional classical ballet. These anatomical limits should be considered individually in training to protect the growing pre-professional ballet dancer. The high ballet-specific anatomical demands, but especially the large number of students with a low body weight, underline the necessity of mandatory aptitude tests at the beginning and regular check-ups in the course of training to avert compensatory mechanisms and their consequential damage and to screen for eating disorders and disorders of eating behaviour.

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