Overweight Kids At Risk For Broken Bones
Children who are overweight face more than future health problems.
They appear to have broken bones and joint problems more often
during childhood than kids of normal weight, research suggests.
"A lot of people think that if you're an overweight kid ...
that later on in life you're going to run into having heart disease
or Type 2 diabetes," said Dr. Susan Yanovski, director of the
obesity and eating disorders program at the National Institute
of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
"But kids and adults who are overweight are already having problems
with their mobility, fractures, and joint pain."
A study led by her husband, obesity researcher Dr. Jack Yanovski,
found that children and teens who were overweight were far more
likely to have had a fracture than their ideal-weight peers.
They also had more bone and hip joint abnormalities, which can
lead to permanent deformities.
The research involved 227 overweight children and adolescents
and 128 who weren't overweight. The children had an average age
of 12. All were enrolled in various federal health studies between
1996 and 2004 and were considered overweight if they were in
the 95th percentile of weight and height for their age and sex.
A review of their medical history revealed that 13 percent of
overweight kids had had at least one broken bone at some point
in their lives, compared with less than 4 percent of ideal-weight
children.
Similar results were found for how many had muscle, bone or
joint pain, especially knee pain, and restricted movement.
"The combination of musculoskeletal pain and poor mobility may
possibly lead to less physical activity ... and perpetuate the
vicious cycle," said Yanovski, head of the growth and obesity
program at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
He presented results of the study at a recent meeting of the
Obesity Society in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Caleb Ezzard knows the problem well.
With 362 pounds on his 5-foot-4-inch frame, the 14-year-old
from Louisville, Ky., developed Blount's disease, a growth disorder
of the shin bone that causes the lower legs to bow inward.
"I used to play football," but the bone problem put an end to
that, he said. "When I would run, my weight would put pressure
on my leg and my bones would start moving and it would hurt."
Even more common than Blount's is SCFE, or slipped capital femoral
epiphysis, caused by improper growth in the ball part of the
ball-and-socket joint that forms the hip, said Dr. Junichi Tamai,
a pediatric orthopedic surgeon at Children's Hospital Medical
Center in Cincinnati.
Children often say their knees hurt, but the real problem is
the malformation that's starting to occur in the joint, he said.
Being unable to exercise makes the situation worse.
"If a child is very active, chances are the bones are very strong," because
weight-bearing exercise promotes bone density, Tamai said.
"Also, a very active child may be able to fall better," he said.
If kids have too many pounds on their frame, "when they fall,
there's just more weight behind it" and bones are more likely
to snap.
Hormones are believed to play a role, too.
"What we generally see is that lean, muscular young men have
the hardest bone, and that goes along with the testosterone," which
can be lower in very overweight boys, Tamai said.
In Caleb's case, orthopedic surgeries could only partly resolve
the leg issues. In October, he had obesity surgery at the Cincinnati
children's hospital, hoping to get at the underlying problem.
"We've tried Weight Watchers, we've tried Slimfast, we tried
the fitness centers with not much success," said Caleb's stepfather,
Steven Reed.
Caleb said that other family members' experiences convinced
him to have the gastric bypass operation.
"I didn't start wanting it until I saw the success it had with
my uncle," he said.
His weight is starting to drop, but he won't be able to consider
much exercise until it falls some more.
"It's painful to walk," he said.
Reference
Source 102
November
21,
2005
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