In line with new advisory by the American
Academy of Pediatrics,
kids as young as 8 will need to take drugs in order to prevent high cholesterol
and heart disease in adults. The innovative new guidelines inform
parents and pediatricians on how to protect high-risk kids for signs which they
have already started to develop cardiovascular disease.
The screening test
evaluates a child's levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol, "good"
HDL cholesterol, and blood fats - also known as triglycerides. High-risk kids
are those whose family members had high cholesterol or premature heart
diseases, those who have weight problems, diabetes or high blood pressure.
The report proposes cholesterol screening for all plump
children, who are susceptible to develop heart disease, and drug therapy to
diminish the bad cholesterol, or low-density lipoproteins. High quantity of bad
cholesterol and low levels of good cholesterol raise the peril of
cardiovascular disease in adults.
A study published this year in the Journal of the American Medical
Association alerts that among US children, approximately 30 percent are
overweight. This segment of population may have excessive rates of heart
disease, diabetes and a blood pressure above what is usual as they grow up,
notified the pediatricians.
About 1 percent of children are eligible for drug
treatment, declared Peter Belamarich, a physician at the Children's Hospital in
New York.
The expert said he'll try not to prescribe drugs for his patients, not until
there will be more lasting safety data on cholesterol- lowering remedy in kids.
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