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High
Blood Pressure Risk
Climbs with Kids' Weight
Overweight children face a far greater
risk of high blood pressure than their leaner peers do, a study
of Houston public schools shows.
The findings, say researchers,
"confirm an evolving epidemic" among U.S. children of weight-related
ills once seen almost exclusively in adults.
The study of 5,102 students ages
10 to 19 found that 4.5 percent had high blood pressure, and blood
pressure rose in tandem with children's body mass index, or BMI.
Among overweight children, 11 percent had high blood pressure,
according to results published in the March issue of the journal
Pediatrics.
High blood pressure is one of a
number of cardiovascular conditions, including type 2 diabetes
and high cholesterol, which are increasingly being seen in children
as their rates of overweight and obesity climb. In the U.S., childhood
obesity has doubled in the past 20 years, and more than 15 percent
of kids between the ages of 6 and 19 are considered obese.
In the past, the rate of high blood
pressure among children has been estimated at about one percent.
The new findings underscore the
importance of preventing children from becoming overweight in
the first place, according to study author Dr. Ronald J. Portman
of the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston.
In an interview, he noted that
the burden is on adults, as children are largely "powerless" over
the problems of obesity and high blood pressure. What's needed,
Portman said, are widespread efforts such as healthier, junk-food-free
school lunch programs and the revival of physical education in
the schools.
"Society has to get together and
say 'enough of this,"' he said.
Among adults, high blood pressure
is a major risk factor for heart attack and stroke over the long
term. But the condition may have a more immediate impact as well.
There's some data suggesting high
blood pressure can have subtle neurological effects, Portman noted.
He said parents sometimes report improvements in their children's
concentration and behavior once their blood pressure is under
control.
Portman and his colleagues assessed
blood pressure among students at eight public schools; high blood
pressure had to be confirmed on three separate occasions for a
child to be diagnosed with the condition.
Overall, 20 percent of the students
had a BMI at or above the 95th percentile-the definition of "overweight"
for children. The prevalence was highest among Hispanic students,
31 percent of whom were overweight. Twenty percent of African-American
kids were overweight, as were 15 percent of white and 11 percent
of Asian children.
Hispanic children also more frequently
had high blood pressure, a finding the researchers tied back to
their disproportionately high BMIs.
Unless measures are taken to curb
childhood obesity and its related health problems, the researchers
conclude, the gains made in fighting cardiovascular disease over
the last 50 years could eventually be lost.
SOURCE: Pediatrics, March 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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