20th ANNIVERSARY OF THE CHILDREN'S HEALTH AND EXERCISE CENTRE, UNIVERSITY
OF EXETER, UK |
In
recent years, partly because of the ever-younger exten-sion of high quality
sport representation and partly, para-doxically, due to ever-increasing
levels of obesity in the young, the discipline of paediatric physiology
has moved from being an interesting curiosity to an extremely impor-tant
area of practical knowledge. For example, children thermoregulate qualitatively
and quantitatively differently from adults - before puberty their sweat
rate per square metre of skin is less than half their adult level - and
they may well have, proportionate to mass, 40% greater body surface area
than an adult. On the musculo-skeletal side, they come late into 'kinetic-balance',
into an appropriately economic mode of running or walking, so such effort
is harder for them. In many other areas children, especially younger children,
differ importantly from adults, and those involved in any aspects of their
exercise, sport or medicine should be well aware of this. Hence the impor-tance
of the discipline, and hence the reason for a very hearty celebration
of the 20th anniversary of the Chil-dren's Health and Exercise Centre
(CHERC), which, as is demonstrated here, has pioneered and expanded the
entire discipline, as one of the world's leading paediatric labora-tories.
Prof. Emeritus N.C. Craig Sharp
Centre for Sports Medicine and Human Performance,
Brunel University, West London.
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Children's Health and Exercise
Centre (1987-2007) past and present mem-bers of the centre were invited
to contribute a review article on paediatric exercise science. The collection
of reviews, written by current and former PhD students, visiting research
fellows and professors, visiting interns and current members of CHERC,
discusses an array of topics, which have helped shaped the work of our
centre. We would also like to take the opportunity to acknowl-edge all
those associated with CHERC over the past 20 years, in particular the
many children who have partici-pated in our research studies.
Prof.
Craig A. Williams
Assoc. Prof & Co-Director of CHERC
School of Sport and Health Sciences, University of Exeter
Children
and Exercise Section Editor
J Sports Sci & Med
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