The legs of female dancers
female dancers legs
Scientific studies of the legs of female professional dancers have revealed a shocking truth: they have the same percentage of slow-twitch muscle fibres as top-level female runners or cross country skiers. This is extremely surprising, since professional dancing involves speed, power, and agility rather than the ability to plod along for extended periods of time.
The study is interesting because it suggests that dance training doesn't change the composition of dancers' leg muscles. Instead, individuals with high er percentages of slow-twitch fibres - and therefore greater endurance and a heightened ability to withstand long training sessions - are drawn to dance as a sport. In addition to suggesting that muscle composition influences an individual's selection of a sporting activity, the Swedish investigation indicates that many competitive dancers would make excellent endurance athletes.
('Is Dance Training In Childhood Related to Deviating Skeletal Muscle Characteristics as Estimated by Biopsies?' Biochemistry of Exercise Ninth International Conference Abstract, #18, p. 18,1994)
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