For a Healthy Heart,
Get an Early Start
Here is a little quiz
for anyone with a heart:
At what age can a child
first show signs of heart disease?
a.) 18
b.) 13
c.) 8
d.) 3
If you said "d," raise
a glass of low-fat milk and go to the head of the class; heart disease
can start at a surprisingly young age.
"Kids look so healthy
that you don't really think about whether they have risk factors
for cardiovascular disease later in life," says Dr. Christine L.
Williams, director of the Children's Cardiovascular Health Center
at Columbia University in New York City.
"But it's a process that
begins very early in childhood. You can begin to see fatty streaks
in the aorta as early as 3 years of age," she says. "The battle's
often lost in the first few years, and it can be very hard to undo
the damage."
Coronary Heart Disease
- The Number One Killer
Coronary heart disease
is the number one killer in the United States, causing
about 525,000 deaths a year.
Williams and other pediatric
heart specialists think they can cut that number by stressing healthy
lifestyles early in childhood.
New
AHA Guidelines Published
So, the American
Heart Association (AHA) recently published
new guidelines for physicians that emphasize education and information
on healthy heart habits for young patients and their families.
Among the recommendations:
-
Get a family history
of heart disease and stroke when the child is still a newborn.
-
Between the ages
of 2 and 6, begin cholesterol screening for children whose
parents have high cholesterol.
-
Start checking the
child's blood pressure at age 3.
-
Encourage active
physical play and discourage sedentary behavior.
"By kindergarten, it's
nice to know which children have a tendency to be on the high-risk
side," says Williams, who chaired the committee that developed the
guidelines. "With a lot of them, all you might have to do is switch
them to low-fat dairy products."
Dr. Hugh Allen, physician-in-chief
at Columbus Children's Hospital in Ohio, says the American
Heart Association hopes to duplicate the success of the
anti-smoking campaign that began in the 1960s and cut the rate of
smoking in half over the next 30 years.
"Very much, I would like
to see the same kind of response," he says. "You might think of
this as an immunization. If we know there are environmental factors
associated with the disease, and we can develop lifestyle changes
that will affect it later in life, that is certainly an effective
approach."
Heart-Healthy
Living Begins At Home and In School
For children, those lifestyle
changes must begin at home and in school, both physicians say.
"The obese kid usually
sits at the table with an obese family," Allen says.
Williams agrees: "The
whole family's got to get involved. This is really a whole-family
issue."
Schools should play their
part, Allen says, by offering healthy meals in the cafeteria and
cutting out the high-fat junk food that many now make available.
And regular physical education, which has fallen victim to cutbacks
over the past 20 years, needs to make a comeback.
"The sad thing is, I saw
a couple of obese kids this morning, and they only have gym once
a week at school," Williams says.
More physicians also need
to make education a regular part of their routine—something
Allen says many are already doing.
"I know a lot of family
practitioners try to work preventative information into their office
material," he says. "Some do a better job than others, but everybody
does have some opportunity. We can whittle away at it every day."
If Allen had his way,
he says, there would be a tax of at least $5 on every pack of cigarettes.
Schools would serve only healthy food.
"And I would encourage
physical activity as a reward, not as a duty," he says. "Let's not
use food as a reward, let's use physical activity as a reward: 'Good
job on your homework -- now you can go out and play.'"
Always consult your child's
physician for more information.
|
October 2002
Coronary
Heart Disease - The Number One Killer
New
AHA Guidelines Published
Heart-Healthy
Living Begins At Home and In School
Hormone
May Signal Heart Trouble in Teens
Online
Resources
Hormone
May Signal Heart Trouble in Teens
Adolescents with
high levels of leptin show early signs of cardiovascular disease
Healthy teenagers who
have high levels of leptin, a hormone linked to obesity, already
show the first signs of stiffening in their blood vessel walls.
That is the disturbing
conclusion of a study published in a recent issue of Circulation,
Journal of the American Heart Association.
The loss of elasticity
in artery walls is an early sign of cardiovascular disease. This
study offers insight into the role of leptin in development of early
cardiovascular disease and indicates a physiological connection
between obesity and vascular disease, the study authors say.
The study included 294
healthy adolescents, aged 13 to 16, with a range of body mass indexes.
Ultrasound tests were used to examine the teenagers' arteries, and
they were measured for blood pressure, blood cholesterol, glucose,
leptin, and the inflammation marker C-reactive protein (CRP).
The researchers found
a connection between elevated leptin levels and arterial impairment,
regardless of other factors. A 10 percent increase in leptin concentration
was associated with a 1.3 percent decrease in arterial elasticity.
Leptin is made by fat
cells and regulates appetite and metabolism. Obese people have high
leptin levels. Decreased elasticity in blood vessels means a heavier
workload for the heart. In healthy people, artery walls contract
and expand as blood is pumped through them.
When arteries become stiff,
they do not dilate fully, and that causes reduced blood flow and
greater exertion for the heart.
Always consult your adolescent's
physician for more information.
Online
Resources
American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
American
Heart Association
Circulation,
Journal of the American Heart Association
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