Kardea

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Statins for Our Kids?

The American Academy of Pediatrics is recommending wider cholesterol screening for children. Underpinning these recommendations is the understanding that elevated LDL (bad) cholesterol in kids can lead to an onset of cardiovascular disease earlier in adulthood. It recognizes that the plaque in an adult's arteries may have begun developing very early in life.

The recommendations call for cholesterol screening of children and adolescents, starting as early as the age of 2 and no later than the age of 10, if they come from families with a history of high cholesterol or heart attacks before 55 for men and 65for women.

Screening is also recommended for children when family history is unknown, or if they have other risk factors, like being at or above the 85th percentile for weight, or have diabetes. If the child’s cholesterol level is normal, retesting is suggested in three to five years.

The report also suggests that for a selected group of children, prescribing a statin medication might be appropriate. Drug treatment, according to these recommendations, should be considered for children 8 and older who have very elevated LDLs, or when family history or weight indicate multiple risk factors for developing heart disease.

Not surprisingly, these recommendations raised an outcry.

“When you have a kid whose cholesterol looks like an overweight 65-year-old, what do you do?” asks Dr. David Ludwig, director of the childhood obesity program at Children’s Hospital in Boston and quoted in The New York Times. In developing the recommendations, we "had to balance the risks of treating children with powerful drugs, about which there is limited long-term data, with the risks of not treating children with unprecedented cardiovascular disease risk factors.”

Dr Ludwig also is reflective about these recommendations. Quoted in the Times, he comments “my concern is what this is saying about society when we are so quick to prescribe drugs for these conditions before having systematically attacked the problem from the public health perspective”.

For many, the systematic solution focuses on addressing childhood obesity. No doubt, an extraordinarily important challenge in its own right. Yet, cholesterol management in children go beyond issues associated with obesity. Elevated cholesterol can be found in otherwise fit and thin adults and children alike.

Between weight loss and medication lies therapeutic nutrition as outlined by the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) of the National Institutes of Health. Eating a balanced diet that replaces saturated fats and trans fats with monounsaturated fats (e.g. fats in olive oil, nut butters), adds high levels of soluble fiber from oats, beans, high-pectin fruits, and psyllium) and adds plant sterols can significantly improve cholesterol and blood lipid profiles. Other nutrients, including Omega-3s from fish oils, also have been found useful.

The NCEP asserts that therapeutic lifestyle changes with a particular emphasis on what we eat (not simply how much we eat) can deliver results comparable to many cholesterol-lowering medications. For links to the NCEP reports, clinical research and other educational materials advancing natural cholesterol management: Kardea Nutrition http://www.kardeanutrition.com/. For recipes: http://www.kardeagourmet.com/

Labels: , , , , ,

3 Comments:

At July 27, 2008 at 3:25 AM , Blogger kpottlitzer said...

I think that this is just more evidence of a larger problem in our society - the childhood obesity epidemic. I firmly believe that the vast majority of children who truly have high cholesterol levels could bring them back into normal range with nutritional and lifestyle changes. We need to solve the larger problem at hand - getting kids active and eating healthfully. Putting kids on statins is just addressing one of the symptoms. In addition, hormone levels are in constant flux throughout childhood, which can directly impact cholesterol levels.For this reason too, I don't feel like a child's cholesterol level can always be accurately assessed.

Kim Pottlitzer RD, LD

 
At July 28, 2008 at 8:26 PM , Blogger Mike Craycraft said...

While statins for children may seem aggressive it should serve as a reminder for all adults that it's never too early to start being concerned about our cholesterol levels.

 
At August 3, 2008 at 11:14 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Diabetes can be controlled by comprising exercise, proper diet, and weight loss, for this follow the rules through Diabetes Management. You not only reduce this risk by 50 percent , but also significantly delay the onset of diabetes. I have reversed my diabetes and so you can also. by managing weight, eating a proper and healthy diet, most important exercise can help you in reversing/ preventing the diabetes. One should also have blood sugar levels checked at least once a year to detect presence of diabetes at an early stage because diabetes early diagnosed can be easily reversed as compared to diabetes diagnosed lately because of the short and long term complications associated with it.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home