|
Artery Thickening Found in Obese Children
New research shows obese children as
young as 10-years-old have arteries resembling heavy smokers and
face the prospect of coronary disease in early middle age.
Using ultrasounds to monitor children's
blood vessels, doctors from Hong Kong and Sydney's Royal Prince
Alfred Hospital found some of the children's arteries had thickened
to look like those of adult smokers.
"It means these children are at
risk of heart attack or stroke in their 40s or 50s, rather than
their 70s or 80s. This has terrible implications for later in
life," said Royal Prince Alfred Hospital cardiologist David Celemajer.
Even flabby children were at risk,
Celemajer said. The research will be published in next month's
issue of "International Journal of Obesity."
RPA director Kate Steinbeck said
a study has found that with a healthy low-fat diet and sustained
exercise over one year, the children's blood vessels returned
to normal.
About 60 percent of Australian
adults are overweight, and Steinbeck said children were increasingly
starting preschool "significantly overweight."
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|