PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Childhood obesity may quadruple high blood pressure risk in adulthood

American Heart Association Meeting Report

2013-09-13
(Press-News.org) Obese children quadruple their risk and overweight children double their risk of developing high blood pressure in adulthood, according to a study presented at the American Heart Association High Blood Pressure Research Scientific Sessions 2013. Researchers tracked the growth and blood pressure of 1,117 healthy adolescents from Indianapolis for 27 years, starting in 1986, and found: During childhood, 68 percent of the kids were a normal weight, 16 percent were overweight and 16 percent were obese. As adults, 119 of the participants were diagnosed with high blood pressure. Six percent of normal weight children had high blood pressure as adults. Fourteen percent of overweight children had high blood pressure as adults. Twenty-six percent of obese children had high blood pressure as adults. The findings highlight the public health threat posed by overweight and obesity in childhood. One in three U.S. children and teens are overweight or obese, meaning their body mass index is at least the 85th percentile or at least the 95th percentile for their age and gender respectively. Body mass index is the relationship between height and weight. The study results are also part of the growing body of evidence that heart disease may start in childhood, said Sara E. Watson, M.D., study author and a pediatric endocrinology fellow at Riley Hospital for Children at Indiana University in Indianapolis, Ind. "It is important that pediatricians counsel patients on the risk of high blood pressure associated with overweight and obesity, and stress that a healthy diet, including reducing salt intake and exercise, may help reduce this risk," Watson said. "Interventions to prevent and treat obesity will play an important role in decreasing the significant burden of high blood pressure in adulthood." ### Co-authors and author disclosures are on the manuscript. The National Institute of Health, Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University Purdue University Signature Center Grant Initiative funded the study. For high blood pressure tools and information visit heart.org/hbp. For the latest heart and stroke news, follow us on Twitter: @HeartNews.

Statements and conclusions of study authors that are presented at American Heart Association scientific meetings are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect association policy or position. The association makes no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability. The association receives funding primarily from individuals; foundations and corporations (including pharmaceutical, device manufacturers and other companies) also make donations and fund specific association programs and events. The association has strict policies to prevent these relationships from influencing the science content. Revenues from pharmaceutical and device corporations are available at http://www.heart.org/corporatefunding.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Molecular structure reveals how HIV infects cells

2013-09-13
SHANGHAI, CHINA, AND LA JOLLA, CA – In a long-awaited finding, a team of Chinese and US scientists has determined the high-resolution atomic structure of a cell-surface receptor that most strains of HIV use to get into human immune cells. The researchers also showed where maraviroc, an HIV drug, attaches to cells and blocks HIV's entry. "These structural details should help us understand more precisely how HIV infects cells, and how we can do better at blocking that process with next-generation drugs," said Beili Wu, PhD, professor at the Shanghai Institute of Materia ...

Ready for its close-up: 1 of HIV's entrance points

2013-09-13
Scientists have gotten the first close look at one of two co-receptors HIV uses to get its foot in the door of the immune system, a new study reports. Their insights could lead to better HIV drugs. CCR5, a receptor on the surface of human cells, is one of two main entry points the HIV virus uses to initiate its attack on the human immune system; by binding to it, an HIV protein can fuse to the cell membrane beneath, ultimately digging its way inside the cell. The other receptor that HIV uses to perform this feat is CXCR4. Both CCR5 and CXCR4 belong to a family of ...

Local animals' role in human drug-resistant Salmonella may previously have been overstated

2013-09-13
A new study has shown that, contrary to popular belief, local domestic animals are unlikely to be the major source of antibiotic resistant Salmonella in humans. The result comes from a detailed study of DNA from more than 370 Salmonella samples collected over a 22-year period. By studying the genetic variation in the Salmonella bacteria and their drug resistance genes, researchers found that distinguishable bacterial populations exist in human and animal populations living side by side. Antibiotic resistance is considered to be one of the most important dangers to human ...

International structures needed for equitable access to DNA identification after disaster

2013-09-13
PITTSBURGH— The April 2013 collapse of the Rana Plaza Factory Building in Bangladesh, in which more than 1,130 people were killed, is only the latest in a long line of events that has made plain the plight of the families whose loved ones go missing after conflict and disaster. In a new paper published in "Science," Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh ethics, policy and human rights experts argue that international structures are needed to promote more equal access to forensic identification technologies, ensure their fair and efficient use, ...

Functioning 'mechanical gears' seen in nature for the first time

2013-09-13
The juvenile Issus - a plant-hopping insect found in gardens across Europe - has hind-leg joints with curved cog-like strips of opposing 'teeth' that intermesh, rotating like mechanical gears to synchronise the animal's legs when it launches into a jump. The finding demonstrates that gear mechanisms previously thought to be solely man-made have an evolutionary precedent. Scientists say this is the "first observation of mechanical gearing in a biological structure". Through a combination of anatomical analysis and high-speed video capture of normal Issus movements, scientists ...

Genes linked to being right- or left-handed identified

2013-09-13
A genetic study has identified a biological process that influences whether we are right handed or left handed. Scientists at the Universities of Oxford, St Andrews, Bristol and the Max Plank Institute in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, found correlations between handedness and a network of genes involved in establishing left-right asymmetry in developing embryos. 'The genes are involved in the biological process through which an early embryo moves on from being a round ball of cells and becomes a growing organism with an established left and right side,' explains first ...

Antibiotic reduction can be achieved through low cost information campaigns, find researchers

2013-09-13
A local low-cost information campaign mainly targeted at citizens and involving doctors and pharmacists can significantly decrease total antibiotic prescribing, finds a paper published today on bmj.com. The excessive use of antibiotics is associated with resistance to these drugs and an increasing threat to global health. Antibiotics are also often unnecessarily and inappropriately prescribed. This is an issue that has been frequently addressed by health information campaigns. Campaigns can be moderately effective in restricting the excessive use of antibiotics although ...

Current pledges put over 600 million people at risk of higher water scarcity

2013-09-13
Our current pledges to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, which are projected to set the global mean temperature increase at around 3.5°C above pre-industrial levels, will expose 668 million people worldwide to new or aggravated water scarcity. This is according to a new study published today, 13 September, in IOP Publishing's journal Environmental Research Letters, which has calculated that a further 11 per cent of the world's population, taken from the year 2000, will live in water-scarce river basins or, for those already living in water-scarce regions, find that the ...

New research shows link between rates of gun ownership and homicides

2013-09-13
(Boston) -- A new study from the American Journal of Public Heath shows that U.S. states with higher estimated rates of gun ownership experience a higher number of firearms-related homicides. The study, led by a Boston University School of Public Health researcher, examines the National Rifle Association's (NRA) claim that increased gun ownership does not lead to increased gun violence. It is the largest study conducted to date into the correlation between gun ownership and firearms violence, and the first to comprehensively examine the issue since the tragic shooting ...

Movement of marine life follows speed and direction of climate change

2013-09-13
VIDEO: New research based at Princeton University shows that the trick to predicting when and where sea animals will relocate due to climate change is to follow the pace and direction... Click here for more information. Scientists expect climate change and warmer oceans to push the fish that people rely on for food and income into new territory. Predictions of where and when species will relocate, however, are based on broad expectations about how animals will move and have ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Would a musical triangle of any other shape sound as sweet?

Do manta rays benefit from collective motion?

Differences in abortion use by sexual orientation in 3 national cohorts

Conversion therapy exposure and elevated cardiovascular disease risk

Most people say they want to know their risk for Alzheimer’s dementia, fewer follow through

New chronic pain therapy retrains the brain to process emotions

Fisetin, a natural compound, helps prevent artery hardening from aging and kidney disease

JMIR Biomedical Engineering invites submissions on AI Applications in Biomedical Engineering

Low blood sugar contributes to eye damage and vision loss in diabetic retinopathy; experimental drug may help treat condition

Fruit and microbes boost biogas production and fermentation

Cutting greenhouse gases will reduce number of deaths from poor air quality

Total and minimum energy efficiency tradeoff in robust multigroup multicast satellite communications

Parent coaching sparks major communication growth in infants with social and communication delays

Duke University Press to publish open access monographs through MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O)

Review: Social drinking also a well-worn path to alcohol use disorder

BMW Group and ESMT Berlin enter fourth year of Change Maker Fellowship to shape leadership for a digital future

Mobile, low-cost arsenic detection tool for safe water

Research advances on ‘displacing’ antibiotic resistance gene from bacteria

Hebrew University’s Dr. Chaim Garfinkel named 2025 Blavatnik Awards Laureate for Pioneering Climate Research

Beyond psychedelics: New journal broadens the scope of consciousness research

Pioneering scientist reveals breakthrough link between psychedelics and immune system in treating fear

Black holes: Beyond the singularity

The West’s spring runoff is older than you think

Halo patterns around coral reefs may signal resilience

Evidence review raises concern about cannabis use in pregnancy

A new method for characterizing quantum gate errors

Shingles vaccine lowers the risk of heart disease for up to eight years

Children as young as five can navigate a 'tiny town'

New study highlights mental health challenges among Ecuadorian healthcare providers during COVID-19

US Naval Research Laboratory’s NIKE laser-target facility helps to advance Department of Defense nuclear mission

[Press-News.org] Childhood obesity may quadruple high blood pressure risk in adulthood
American Heart Association Meeting Report