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Overweight
Children at Higher Heart Risk
Excerpt
By
Amanda Gardner,
HealthDay
Overweight and obese children
tend to have higher concentrations of a protein that may indicate
the presence of extremely early heart disease.
"It's one more wake-up call
that all of the wonderful things we are developing to treat and
prevent heart disease are not going to prevent an increase in
the epidemic if we don't learn how to be a population of people
that eats fewer calories and exercises more," says Dr. Richard
Stein, a spokesman for the American Heart Association.
Others urge caution about the finding,
which appears in the Aug. 19 issue of Circulation.
"Whether that chronic response
[of the protein] is going to result over time in significant increases
in atherosclerotic disease is not yet clear," says Dr. Mubadda
Salim, chief of pediatric cardiology at the University of Maryland
Hospital for Children in Baltimore. "When we find something
that correlates with something else, we don't know how long it's
going to be before the relationship becomes more significant.
That's one of the dilemmas we have with a study like this."
The protein in question is C-reactive
protein (CRP), which has recently emerged as a possible new way
to evaluate an adult's risk for cardiovascular disease. Levels
of CRP increase in response to inflammation, such as the buildup
of fat or plaque in artery walls. This type of buildup is the
telltale sign of atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries.
In children, CRP has been used
for about a decade to measure the presence of a variety of different
infections, Salim says. It has not been used in relation to cardiac
events, however, because these events are so rare in children.
The authors of this study analyzed
data on 1,479 boys and 1,367 girls, ages 3 to 17, that had been
collected as part of the National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES) in 1999 and 2000.
A highly sensitive test was used
to measure CRP concentrations. These were then correlated with
age, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, and triglyceride
concentrations.
Body mass index turned out to be
the best predictor of CRP concentration. The association was a
linear one, meaning that the higher the BMI, the higher the CRP
levels.
Increasing age was also associated
with higher CRP concentrations among the boys in the group. For
girls aged 12 to 17, increasing CRP levels were associated with
increased systolic blood pressure (the top number in the reading).
There were also some racial and
ethnic differences among boys aged 8 to 17 and among girls aged
8 to 11.
On the other hand, CRP levels did
not correlate with other known risk factors for heart disease,
such as smoking and blood pressure.
All in all, the findings are provocative
but are not a reason to go get your child's CRP levels tested,
experts say.
If a child is overweight or obese,
however, that's reason enough to make lifestyle changes.
"You can tell obese people
to lose weight. It's not only bad for your well-being, but it
means your body is reacting adversely to the obesity," Salim
says.
More information
The American Heart Association
has information on atherosclerosis
and on C-reactive
protein.
Also try our BMI
calculator.
Reference
Source 101
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