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Children with Heart Disease Often Obese
PHILADELPHIA,
Nov. 1 (UPI) -- More than 25 percent of children with congenital and acquired
heart disease are overweight or obese, a U.S. study found.
Researchers
at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Children’s Hospital Boston
said that this 25 percent prevalence is similar to the rate found in the
general population but the health risks from obesity are added to the children’s
separate risks from their underlying heart disease.
Primary
investigator Dr. Nelangi M. Pinto, from the University of Utah but at The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia during the study, said children with
congenital heart disease may have unique risk factors that could contribute
to the development of obesity.
The researchers
reviewed the medical records from a sample of 2,921 patients between ages
6 and 19 years treated at a hospital for cardiology outpatient care --
of which 1,523 children had either acquired or congenital heart disease.
The study, published
in Pediatrics, found among the children with heart disease, those with
heart transplants, rhythm problems and mild heart disease had a similar
prevalence of obesity to the clinic control group -- about 25 percent.
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