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. 1995 Sep-Oct;22(5):427-41.
doi: 10.1080/03014469500004102.

Aerobic fitness of prepubescent children

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Free article

Aerobic fitness of prepubescent children

N Armstrong et al. Ann Hum Biol. 1995 Sep-Oct.
Free article

Erratum in

  • Ann Hum Biol 1996 Mar-Apr;23(2):188

Abstract

This study was designed to enhance understanding of the assessment and interpretation of the aerobic fitness of prepubertal children. Written informed consent to participate was obtained from 70% of the children in year six of the 15 state schools in the city of Exeter. Twenty-five per cent of the eligible children in each school were randomly selected from those who volunteered. The data reported here are those obtained from the 111 boys (11.1 SD 0.4 years) and 53 girls (10.9 SD 0.3 years) classified as Tanner stage 1 in both pubic hair rating and either genitalia rating (boys) or breast rating (girls). Peak oxygen uptake (peak VO2) was determined using a discontinuous, incremental protocol on a treadmill. Only a minority of children demonstrated a levelling-off or plateau in VO2 despite an increase in exercise intensity. There was no evidence to suggest that the children who demonstrated a VO2 plateau had significantly (p < 0.05) higher peak VO2, peak heart rate, peak respiratory exchange ratio or peak blood lactate than those children who did not demonstrate a plateau in VO2. These findings indicate that a VO2 plateau should not be used as a requirement for defining a maximal exercise test with prepubertal children. Boys had a significantly (p < 0.01) higher peak VO2 than girls, whether expressed in 1.min-1 (1.78 vs 1.46) or in relation to body mass (51 vs 45 ml.kg-1.min-1). The results compare favourably with those of similarly aged children from other countries, but why prepubescent boys have significantly higher (13.3%) mass-related peak VO2 than prepubescent girls is not readily apparent. Although conventional, the expression of peak VO2 as per body mass ratio may not adequately partition out body-size differences. The influence of body mass was therefore removed using a linear adjustment scaling model and a log-linear model, but the boys' peak VO2 remained significantly (p < 0.01) higher than the girls' peak VO2 with the difference now being 16.0% and 16.2%, respectively.

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