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Studies
Back Earlier Tests
for Heart Disease Risks
Two recent studies published
suggest that the risk of heart disease can be identified early
in life, and that cholesterol and other tests should be initiated
earlier than they now are.
One report from the Tulane University
Health Sciences Center in New Orleans, which looked at 486 adults
who had been tested since childhood, found that those with weight,
cholesterol and other problems early on wound up with a narrowing
of the carotid artery as adults.
The artery supplies blood to the
brain, and obstruction can lead to a stroke.
A second study from the University
of Turku, Finland, involved 2,229 adults aged 24 to 39 years who
had been measured at ages 3 to 18 in 1980 and then again 21 years
later.
"Our findings indicate that children
and adolescents with several risk factors are at increased risk
of developing atherosclerosis in adulthood," said the study. The
risk factors included obesity, high blood fat levels and high
blood pressure.
"Reductions in these factors could
be potentially achieved in children with lifestyle modifications
such as inducing changes in the diet, increasing levels of physical
activity and controlling obesity," the authors said.
Both studies were published in
this week's Journal of the American Medical Association, which
also carried an editorial commenting on them by Henry McGill Jr.,
and C. Alex McMahan, both of the University of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio.
"With the evidence now emerging
that shows that cholesterol and other risk factors do matter during
adolescence, it may now be time to reconsider the age at which
measurement of cholesterol levels should begin," they said.
Except for families where there
are notable risk factors, cholesterol testing is usually not done
until adulthood.
"From a public health perspective,
it is essential to promote a culture in which young persons are
encouraged to maintain safe and healthy lifestyles," they added.
"The difficulty of modifying lifestyles of teen-agers in the current
environment of the industrialized societies should not be underestimated,
and success may require decades, perhaps even generations."
Reference
Source 101
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