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Cholesterol
Problems Start in Childhood
(HealthDayNews) -- Kids' affinity
for fast food may have health consequences that persist into adulthood:
A new study finds high cholesterol levels in early childhood predict
cholesterol problems later in life.
Ensuring that children eat a low-cholesterol
diet is crucial to controlling high cholesterol, the study suggests.
Columbia University researchers
collected data on 448 children enrolled in New York Head Start
preschool programs who were also part of the Healthy Start program,
a food service intervention and health education effort.
Healthy Start is designed to instill
healthy eating habits in children by showing them how to eat foods
low in saturated fat and high in nutrition at the preschool level.
Between 1995 and 1997, the researchers
measured the children's cholesterol levels when they enrolled
in preschool at ages 3 and 4. Five years later, the team re-measured
the children's cholesterol and compared their levels at age 8
to their baseline measurement.
They found children who had the
highest cholesterol levels in preschool tended to retain high
levels up until age 8.
"Even kids who had a normal
cholesterol level showed an increased risk five years later,"
says study author Barbara Strobino, an associate research scientist
with the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
in New York City. She presented her work June 9 at the American
Heart Association's Second Asia Pacific Forum in Honolulu.
The discovery is important because
high cholesterol is a strong predictor of heart disease.
"If you can figure out the
child's LDL, you can pretty much know what they're going to have
as an adult," says Dr. Gerald Berenson, a professor of epidemiology
in the Tulane University School of Public Health and an expert
in childhood cholesterol.
While high cholesterol levels appear
to have a genetic cause, the condition can be controlled through
diet management and exercise.
For that reason, small steps such
as replacing whole milk with skim milk and cutting out fast food
can help preschool children slash their cholesterol and prevent
future chronic disease.
The data support the need for more
programs like the Healthy Start project, which helps children
establish good eating habits early in life.
With the current epidemic in childhood
obesity, Healthy Start is a critical strategy for improving the
lifelong health of children at risk for chronic disease, Berenson
says.
"Health promotion like this
[program] is something we need all over the country," he
says.
More information
Read what the American
Academy of Pediatrics has to say about childhood cholesterol.
Also, click on the National
Healthy Start Association to learn about proper nutrition
for children.
Reference
Source 101
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