|
Even
A Little Bit Of Extra
Fat Hurts Kids' Arteries
Even a little bit of extra fat in the adolescent years weakens
the body's ability to fight heart disease in adult life, a British
study finds.
Using ultrasound to peer at the arteries of 471 youngsters aged
13 to 15, researchers at St. George's Hospital Medical Center
in London found that extra fat lessened "distensibility," a measure
of arteries' ability to expand, according to a report in the Sept.
20 online issue of Circulation.
"This is more evidence that being overweight as an adolescent
does have long-term implications," said study author Peter H.
Whincup, a professor of cardiovascular epidemiology at St. George's.
It's been known that severe obesity in teenagers damages the
endothelium, the delicate lining of the arteries, reducing their
ability to expand. This study shows that the damage can occur
at "body-mass index levels well below those considered to represent
obesity," the researchers wrote.
Traditionally, Whincup said, the major concerns about heart disease
have been blood pressure, cholesterol and "above all, smoking."
"What we are looking at here is an early model of risk, the balance
of determinants in the early years of life," he said. "Obesity,
or degrees of it, are the dominant factors at this stage."
Until recently, heart disease risk factors such as high cholesterol
and high blood pressure were uncommon in childhood, the researchers
noted. One reason for the study was that such risk factors have
become increasingly common as the rate of childhood obesity has
soared.
Some of the children in the study had been studied earlier, when
they were 9 to 11 years old, so the researchers could look at
the effects of various heart disease risk factors over time.
They found that insulin resistance, diastolic blood pressure
(the second number in a blood pressure reading) and levels of
C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation, were also associated
with reduced distensibility. The association with blood pressure
showed up as early as age 9, the researchers said.
"The message is not for individuals at this stage," Whincup said.
Instead, he said, it is for society at large to take more steps
to keep children and adolescents slimmer.
"There is no magic formula," he said. "It is simply that calorie
intake is too high in relation to expenditures of energy."
A combination of better diet and more exercise -- standard recommendations
for adults -- apply to adolescents as well, he said.
"This whole concept of distensibility is potentially an important
one because one of the difficulties in understanding the early
process of atherosclerosis is how to look at it," said Dr. Stephen
Daniels, a professor of pediatrics at the Cincinnati Children's
Hospital Center, and a spokesman for the American
Heart Association. "This is one way to do it."
The real-life lesson of the study is that overweight "is having
an adverse effect at many levels," he said. "In a world where
more and more children are getting into obesity, this says that
we have to be more aggressive in trying to prevent it."
Reference
Source 101
September
20, 2005
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|