July 14, 2010 9:44 AM

Should All Kids be Screened for Cholesterol? Study Suggests Yes

By
Hannah Atkin
Topics
News ,
Kids and family ,
Diet ,
Heart ,
Diabetes

(AP)

(CBS) A new study released online Sunday in the journal of Pediatrics suggests that all children should be screened for high cholesterol, contrary to the current recommendation by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The current national recommendation suggests that children be screened only when their parents or grandparents have been diagnosed with heart disease prior to age 55, when at least one parent has total cholesterol over 240, or when family history is not available.

But researchers studying fifth graders in West Virginia since 1998 found that more than a third of the kids had serious cholesterol problems.

"We would have missed 36% of children with seriously high LDL." said William Neal, the study's director and a pediatric cardiologist at West Virginia University.

Of the several types of cholesterol, scientists consider LDL, or low-density lipoprotein, to be indicative of heart disease if the body builds up too much of it.

20,266 children in total were screened throughout Neal's study, including 5,798 of which would not have met the current screening guidelines. Researchers found 268 children with cholesterol high enough to be treated with medication, of which 36% came from the "lower risk" group.

The study's authors believe that if all children are screened and treated at a young age then heart disease can be prevented later in life, according to the L.A. Times.

The study states that the reason for the current screening guidelines, established in the 1990s, was to discourage labeling children with heart risk and to avoid the overuse of cholesterol drugs in kids, reports the Wall Street Journal, a fear some still have today.

The study is state funded and does not involve drug-industry sponsorship, according to the paper.


Add a Comment
by thejoker12 July 14, 2010 11:40 AM EDT
thanks to screening my child was found to have a total cholesterol of 247. Thanks to that screening I found out that my EX, who shares custody, was feeding my son fast food 3x/wk and was allowed to drink as much pop as he pleased. Now the poor kid is down to 2 pops a day and one Mc D meal a week at dads and my children said that was a big improvement. My EX, who has high cholesterol, claims the child is not obese. My EX claims the doctor ment lose 10 pounds OR grow two inches. He says the numbers mean d***. My EX may find himself paying child support if he doesn't start being a responsible parent.
Reply to this comment
by book_of_wally July 14, 2010 10:04 AM EDT
Look at that kid, stuffing his face with hamburger and french fries. Where are the fruits and veggies? If they ate those, there would be no need for the tests.
Reply to this comment
by ixsixs August 5, 2010 10:54 AM EDT
Veggies, yes. Just skip the fries and the bread. Take more meat instead.
It?s the carb that kills you.
Suger = White pure and deadly!
.

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