![]() |
| Home | Visitor and Patient Guide | For Physicians | Health Information | Physician Directory | Contact Us | |||||
| News & Information |
|
|
Obesity in Teens Studied< July 19, 2006 > -- Two new studies on adolescent obesity are concerned with long-term obesity effects as well as a possible solution for the condition. One study in the Annals of Internal Medicine reports that teenage girls who are obese run a three-fold greater risk of premature death in middle age. Another report, also in the journal, found that the diet medication sibutramine - brand-named Meridia® - along with behavior therapy, helps very obese adolescents lose weight. The study was funded by Abbott Laboratories, Inc., the makers of Meridia. In the first study, researchers found a link between teenage obesity and premature death among 102,400 women enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study II. The women, who were aged 24 to 44 at the start of the study, were asked to recall their weight when they were 18 years old. During 12 years of follow-up, 710 of the women died. The researchers, led by Dr. Frank B. Hu, an associate professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, found that a higher-than-normal body mass index, or BMI, at age 18 was associated with as much as a three-fold increased risk for death, compared with girls who had a normal BMI. BMI is a measure of weight proportionate to height, and is considered a useful measurement of the amount of body fat. Dr. Hu says excess weight during adolescence can increase the risk for heart disease and diabetes, both of which can lead to complications and death in adulthood. "The link between childhood obesity and premature death is an important public health issue," Dr. Hu says. "Prevention at early ages is an important strategy to combat this problem." In the second study, researchers assigned 498 very obese teens, 12 to 16 years old, to receive either sibutramine plus behavior therapy, or a placebo. At the beginning of the one-year study, the teens weighed an average of 215 pounds. "This is the first study to evaluate whether sibutramine in addition to a lifestyle-modification [behavior modification] program helps very obese adolescents," says lead author Dr. Robert I. Berkowitz, an associate professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and director of the school's Weight and Eating Disorders Program. Sibutramine works by increasing the feeling of fullness and reducing hunger, Dr. Berkowitz says. "We saw there was a significant difference in weight in the two groups after a year," he says. The second component of the study, behavior modification, works by helping people to change and gain control over unwanted behaviors. Over a year, those teens taking sibutramine and attending behavior therapy lost an average of 14 pounds, while those taking the placebo gained about four pounds. In addition, those taking the diet pill and receiving behavior modification therapy also lowered their risk for heart disease by lowering their cholesterol, triglyceride levels, insulin levels, and insulin sensitivity, Dr. Berkowitz says. These findings could prove valuable in the United States, where 15.5 percent of teens are overweight. Dr. Berkowitz notes that sibutramine is not currently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for children under 16 years of age. "We need long-term studies to determine the long-term side effects," he says. "There were small increases in blood pressure and pulse rate in the trial, which have to be monitored." "Treatment with sibutramine [along with behavior therapy] may be helpful under careful monitoring," he adds. One expert, however, does not think pills or surgery are the answer to the obesity epidemic facing today's teens. Dr. David L. Katz, an associate professor of public health and director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine, notes that while recent adolescent studies show positive results from gastric bypass surgery and medication therapy, relying on medications or surgery to treat obesity among our youth is indicative of "glaring societal failures." "Obesity is preventable by means well understood and at our disposal - increasing physical activity, and reducing caloric intake. Unlike drugs and surgery, these options enhance overall health, come at low or no cost, and do not impose a risk of complications," states Dr. Katz. These findings are especially interesting when juxtaposed with those of Dr. Hu's study on the impact of adolescent obesity on future mortality, Dr. Katz says. "Perhaps the judicious use of weight-control medication could be used to mitigate this threat [to adolescent health]," he notes. Always consult your child's physician for more information.
|
|||
|
|
|