Biomedical aspects of sport and exercise ****************************************************************************************** * Biomedical aspects of sport and exercise ****************************************************************************************** Research on physiological changes during the exercise or adaptation changes that are cause sports activity has a long tradition at Faculty of Physical Education and Sport. The impor this research affects not only athletes, but also the child, adult, and normal population Physiological parameters are investigated as such, but they also serve to evaluate the eff of many interventions. Moreover, research attention is also paid to the molecular-genetic performance. The predispositions for movement and sport performance at different levels of are evaluated, starting with children and ending with seniors and at the same time an effe training and regime measures is evaluated with the aim of adaptation of lifestyle, reducti contemporary lifestyle, increase in performance, cultivation of movement skills, reduction ****************************************************************************************** * Selected outputs ****************************************************************************************** • Bunc, V. c., & Skalska, M. (2014). Are the Children?äs Predispositions for Physical Exer by Their Body Mass? American Journal of Sports Science and Medicine, 2(5), 177-180. • Vetrovsky, T., Steffl, M., Stastny, P., & Tufano, J. J. (2019). The Efficacy and Safety Plyometric Training in Older Adults: A Systematic Review. Sports Medicine, 49(1), 113-13 • Petr, M., Stastny, P., Zajac, A., Tufano, J., & Maciejewska-Skrendo, A. (2018). The Role Proliferator-Activated Receptors and Their Transcriptional Coactivators Gene Variations Trainability: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 19(5), 1 • Petr, M., St'astny, P., Pecha, O., Steffl, M., Seda, O., & Kohlikova, E. (2014). PPARA I Polymorphism Associated with Power Performance in 30-s Anaerobic Wingate Test. PLoS One,