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Too
Much Weight Tugs at Kids' Hearts Sun
Feb 29,11:47 PM ET By
Dennis Thompson Jr. SUNDAY,
Feb. 29 (HealthDayNews) -- Need more proof the U.S. childhood obesity crisis may
be a ticking time bomb? Researchers
have found that many schoolchildren are exhibiting early risk factors of
diabetes and heart disease, often displaying troubling symptoms that usually
show up in adults. In
fact, a recent study found one in eight children have three or more risk factors
for what doctors call metabolic syndrome, a cluster of symptoms that serve as an
early warning signal for heart disease and diabetes. And more than half of the
children have at least one of the risk factors. These
risk factors include high blood pressure, inefficient processing of glucose,
elevated insulin levels, low levels of "good" HDL cholesterol and
elevated triglycerides -- a fatty substance found in the blood. But
the real culprit is obesity, says study leader Joanne S. Harrell, director of
the Center for Research on Chronic Illness at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. "Almost
half of our children are overweight or at risk for overweight," Harrell
says. "These findings document what has been evident to most people who
deal with a large number of children, that obesity is an epidemic in our
youngsters." If
parents and educators don't take action, American kids could face an unhealthy
and shortened life, says Dr. Henry McGill, a senior scientist emeritus at the
Southwestern Foundation for Biomedical Research in Texas. McGill has researched
the subject of children and heart disease for decades. "We
know enough about the risk factors related to lifestyle that if we could control
them from adolescence or childhood, we could probably prevent 80 to 90 percent
of coronary heart disease that happens prior to age 65 or 70," McGill says. McGill
and Harrell recommend a number of ways parents can protect their children:
"There's
no magic here," McGill says. "People have to eat less and move around
more, although everything in our culture is against that." Harrell's
team followed more than 3,200 students, about half boys and half girls between
the ages of 8 and 17, in a rural North Carolina county. The researchers
evaluated each student's body mass index, a ratio of weight to height, along
with other risk factors. More
than half of the children had at least one of the risk factors for metabolic
syndrome. About one-quarter of the children had two or more factors, and one in
eight had three or more. Most
troubling, about 8 percent of children aged 8 or 9 already displayed three or
more risk factors, Harrell says. Girls
suffered more often from the risk factors, she says. About 16 percent of girls
had three or more, compared with 10 percent of boys with three or more. The
most common risk factor was a lack of "good" HDL cholesterol. That was
found in more than 40 percent of the children. One
in four children was classified as overweight. "We found that 26 percent
were at or above the 95th percentile for expected weight given their age and
gender," she says. "You would expect only 5 percent to be at
that." About
an equal number were considered at risk for becoming overweight. High
levels of insulin were found in 16 percent of the children, high blood pressure
in 10 percent, high triglycerides in 8 percent and glucose intolerance in about
5 percent. Harrell,
who presented her findings at a recent meeting of the American Heart
Association, is reluctant to say the presence of the risk factors in children
automatically means an unhealthy adulthood, citing a lack of research in that
area. But
a recent study by Finnish researchers seems to point to that link. The
scientists followed more than 2,000 children and teens and measured them for
risk factors. They found if the children displayed several risk factors, they
had a greater chance of suffering from hardening of the arteries as adults. McGill
says it's particularly frustrating to get the word out about this potential link
because you're talking about symptoms that could take decades to result in a
disease. "It's
a tough sell," he says. "Young people think they're immortal.
Physicians don't get paid to prevent something that's going to occur 20 or 30 or
40 years later." |