Abstract

PurposeTo determine sweating responses of pre-pubertal children during intermittent exercise in a warm environment and create whole-body maps of regional sweat rate (RSRs) distribution across the body.MethodsThirteen pre-pubertal children; six girls and seven boys (8.1 ± 0.8 years) took part. Sweat was collected using the technical absorbent method in the last 5 min of a 30-min intermittent exercise protocol performed at 30 ℃, 40% relative humidity and 2 m·s−1 frontal wind.ResultsMean gross sweat loss (GSL) was 126 ± 47 g·m−2·h−1 and metabolic heat production was 278 ± 50 W·m2. The lower anterior torso area had the lowest RSR with a median (IQR) sweat rate (SR) of 40 (32) g·m−2·h−1. The highest was the forehead with a median SR of 255 (163) g·m−2·h−1. Normalised sweat maps (the ratio of each region’s SR to the mean SR for all measured pad regions) showed girls displayed lower ratio values at the anterior and posterior torso, and higher ratios at the hands, feet and forehead compared to boys. Absolute SRs were similar at hands and feet, but girls sweated less in most other areas, even after correction for metabolic rate.ConclusionPre-pubertal children have different RSRs across the body, also showing sex differences in sweat distribution. Distributions differ from adults. Hands and feet RSR remain stable, but SR across other body areas increase with maturation. These data can increase specificity of models of human thermoregulation, improve the measurement accuracy of child-sized thermal manikins, and aid companies during product design and communication.

Highlights

  • Thermoregulation is a biological control system designed to maintain body temperature within a safe range

  • This study has shown that pre-pubertal children do have substantially differing regional sweat rates across the body

  • Their sweat rate distribution differs from that observed in adults performing a similar exercise protocol to the children

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Summary

Introduction

Thermoregulation is a biological control system designed to maintain body temperature within a safe range. Neutral, or even mild heat environments, ambient temperature (Ta) is lower than skin temperature (Tsk). In these conditions children have been shown to effectively thermoregulate mainly via dry heat loss mechanisms, where convective and radiant heat exchanges occur between the skin and the surrounding air (Bar-Or 1980; Naughton and Carlson 2008). Children’s larger body surface area to mass ratio (BSA/M) compared to adults allows them to have effective dry heat losses (Davies 1981). This, along with their rapid vasodilatory responses,

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