i believe my bones have fully grown (im 17 years old and havn't grown since the end of 2004), i believe i wouldn't grow any taller. i have an extremely small bone frame (6 inch wrists)
does weight training help me to make my bones bigger?(i know my bones are not gonna grow vertically, but can my bone frame grow bigger? )
|
-
05-23-2007, 04:12 AM #1
can grown bones grow thicker and stronger?
-
05-23-2007, 08:53 AM #2
You can increase bone mineral density through resistance training. You don't know if your bones are closed until you actually look at your epithelial plates (growth plates) and see if they are fused closed.
B.S. Exercise Science , CSCS, CES
Bench 350
Squat 510
Hang Clean 310
Height 6'2
Weight 238
Position MLB
40 time 4.85
Vertical Jump 30 inches
-
05-23-2007, 04:21 PM #3
-
05-24-2007, 01:51 PM #4
???????????????
First, growth plates are called the epiphyseal plates. I guess I missed that day in school when they showed us where to check and see if the fused plates have closed. (???)
Growth is usually complete around your age. Strength training has been shown in medical studies to increase bone mass and decrease the risk of osteoporosis (a condition i which bone density is reduced, but it mostly effects older folks).
http://www.newstarget.com/010528.html
But for you, just increase your muscle mass as much as you can, if your looking for that bigger appearance. And calcium is the preferred supplement for your bones and teeth, so just drink milk regularlyLast edited by pcercy; 05-24-2007 at 01:55 PM. Reason: typo
"I have the knowledge, now I need the discipline to put it in play" - me
"So live that you can look any man in the eye and tell him to go to hell" - John D. Rockefeller, Jr. on personal success.
-
-
05-24-2007, 02:43 PM #5
ya, calcium, exercise and putting pressure on your bones (walking, running, weightlifting) will make your bones stronger, increase its density and reduce the chance of osteoporosis. if you dont have a right diet, you body will eat away at the calcium in your bones, which in the long run, will cause problems like osteoporisis and major injuries.
-
05-24-2007, 09:10 PM #6
-
05-25-2007, 02:15 PM #7
"???????????????
First, growth plates are called the epiphyseal plates. I guess I missed that day in school when they showed us where to check and see if the fused plates have closed. (???)
Growth is usually complete around your age. Strength training has been shown in medical studies to increase bone mass and decrease the risk of osteoporosis (a condition i which bone density is reduced, but it mostly effects older folks).
http://www.newstarget.com/010528.html
But for you, just increase your muscle mass as much as you can, if your looking for that bigger appearance. And calcium is the preferred supplement for your bones and teeth, so just drink milk regularly"
Pcercy,
My bad i didn't hit spell check before i posted the thread. I will make sure my spelling is perfect next time. Also, pcercy you added nothing to this thread. You repeated what i posted about the closure of EPIPYSEAL plates. The kid is 17 years old and i doubt he has to worry about osteoporosis unless he doesn't take in calcium, which is probably not a problem. His osteoblasts are prolly working just fine. If you even know what they are.B.S. Exercise Science , CSCS, CES
Bench 350
Squat 510
Hang Clean 310
Height 6'2
Weight 238
Position MLB
40 time 4.85
Vertical Jump 30 inches
-
05-25-2007, 07:13 PM #8
It's not just the spelling, because epithelial cells are the cells that make up your outermost layer of skin and case glands and organs, providing internal transport and such, definitely not bone. You just got the words confused.
To the other guy: I don't the average person stops growing at 17 years old, more like 19-21.Last edited by MSmith19; 05-25-2007 at 07:20 PM.
-
-
05-25-2007, 10:04 PM #9
- Join Date: May 2007
- Location: Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
- Age: 37
- Posts: 123
- Rep Power: 207
the simple anwer is yes and the best ways are yes walking, running, weight lifting. Some exercises that are sometimes mistaken for making bones stronger are swimming, and biking and it is becasue these do not deal with something like contact or pressure i know somebody can tell the exact reason why i'll look it up later but its realted to somethinalong those lines. Also you can tell if youve grown fully from plated from an x-ray i know the doc told me i was down growing when i was about to get knee surgery casue he wanted to make sure .
-
05-26-2007, 01:39 PM #10
I can't find a picture of it, but it was a old Nike ad that ran I think last summer or 2 summers ago in magazines. It had a picture of LeBron James in the air about to dunk being pulled by his trainer with a resistance band attatched around LBJs waist, and a little caption said that this increases bone density, hang time, and body control.
Also, drink ur milk, eat ur yogurt, cheese.......get ur calcium!
Bookmarks