Childhood May Predict Type 2 Diabetes
Key Factors May Predict Which Kids Have Type 2 Diabetes As Adults
-
(CBS/AP)
-
Special Report Diabetes Symptoms, treatments, and how to prevent it.
A new study spotlights two key strategies:
1. Start early. Watch for type 2 diabetes risk factors beginning in childhood.
2. Manage weight for a lifetime.
The goal is to head off a condition called metabolic syndrome, which can lead to type 2 diabetes.
People with metabolic syndrome have at least three of these traits:
- Large waist
- Above-normal blood pressure
- Above-normal blood sugar (glucose) after fasting
- Above-normal triglycerides (a type of fat in the blood) after fasting
- Below-normal HDL ("good") cholesterol
Predicting Diabetes
The new study started in the 1970s and spanned a quarter of a century.
At the study's start, 814 boys and girls (average age: 13) got their height, weight, blood pressure , glucose, triglycerides, and cholesterol measured.
Back then, about 13% were overweight or at risk for becoming overweight and 4% had metabolic syndrome.
Some 25-30 years later, the participants got another checkup. This time, a quarter of them were overweight, 26% had metabolic syndrome, and about 5% had type 2 diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes was most common among the following groups:
- Adults who had metabolic syndrome as kids
- Adults who had a parental history of diabetes
- African-Americans, who were twice as likely as whites to have type 2 diabetes as adults
- Older adults (diabetes becomes more likely with age)
The researchers, who included John Morrison, PhD, of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, conclude that kids aged 5-19 should be checked for metabolic syndrome and parental history of diabetes.
Morrison's team also emphasizes the importance of weight management to make metabolic syndrome and diabetes less likely.
The study appears online in The Journal of Pediatrics.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
© 2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- This is interesting. Let me also say, though one could call this irrelevant to the story, that I''ve been harsh on the public education system in the past and feel the need to tone it down. In the end, parents that can''t afford private school or can''t handle home schooling have to send their kids to public schools and we should be about improving schools not tearing them down. Back to the story: I hope this helps where diabetes is concerned.
- Reply to this comment
Grammy winner Shakira on her music career, philanthropy and being sexy.




