Reported June 10,
2003
Children’s Cholesterol
Matters
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- A new
study shows young children with
high cholesterol levels are more
likely to develop high
cholesterol in later childhood
and adulthood.
Researchers studied the
eating habits and cholesterol
levels of nearly 450 preschool
children for about five years.
The children were examined by
doctors and had their HDL, or
good cholesterol, and LDL, or
bad cholesterol, measured
periodically.
Results of the study show
children with the highest levels
of cholesterol at 3 and 4 years
old also had the highest levels
five years later. Those with
levels in the top 10 percent
remained in the top 10 percent
at the end of the study.
Children with slightly elevated
cholesterol levels (levels
measuring about 164 milligrams
per deciliter) were five-times
more likely to have high
cholesterol by the time they
reached 8 years old.
Authors of the study say
their findings prove good eating
habits aimed to lower
cholesterol levels should begin
early in life. Barbara Strobino,
Ph.D., from Columbia University
College of Physicians and
Surgeons, says, “Preventing
coronary heart disease can begin
as early as 3 and 4 years of
age. It is during these years
that primary intervention may be
most effective.”
Strobino says monitoring
children’s cholesterol is
important, especially since high
cholesterol can put them at risk
for developing heart disease
later in life. She says,
“Autopsy studies in children
have found that precursors of
coronary heart disease, such as
fatty streaks and lesions in the
arteries, are associated with
cholesterol and other fats in
the blood.”
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SOURCE: American Heart
Association’s Second Asia
Pacific Scientific Forum,
Honolulu, June 8-10, 2003