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

Obese children more likely to have complex elbow fractures and further complications

Study authors urge parents to keep kids active and strengthen bones early

2014-02-11
(Press-News.org) ROSEMONT, Ill.─Pediatric obesity is currently an epidemic, with the prevalence having quadruped over the last 25 years. Children diagnosed with obesity can be at risk for various long-term health issues and may be putting their musculoskeletal system at risk. According to new research in the February issue of the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (JBJS), obese children who sustain a supracondylar humeral (above the elbow) fracture can be expected to have more complex fractures and experience more postoperative complications than children of a normal weight.

"These findings show that children diagnosed with obesity are more likely to sustain these complex fractures from something as simple as falling onto an outstretched hand while standing, and these types of falls are quite common," said author Michelle S. Caird, MD, assistant professor in the department of orthopaedic surgery at the University of Michigan. "Our research aims to remind parents that there are many serious risks to childhood obesity, including fractures and surgical complications. It's important to ensure that children get the proper amount of exercise and to build their bone banks early in life to a strong and healthy frame."

Specific Study Details More than 350 patients ranging in age from 2 to 11 years old who had undergone operative treatment for supracondylar humeral fractures were included in the study. Patient records were reviewed for demographic data, body mass index (BMI) percentile, and injury data. Forty-one children were underweight (BMI 85th percentile), and 68 were obese (BMI in the >95th percentile). The study included 149 patients with type-2 fractures (a break through part of the bone at the growth plate and crack through the bone shaft), 11 of whom were diagnosed with obesity; and 205 patients with type-3 fractures, 57 of whom were diagnosed with obesity. Complex fractures were defined as Type-3 fractures (completely displaced), fractures with multiple fracture lines, open fractures where the bone is exposed through the skin, and multiple fractures in the same arm. Using logistic regression, obesity was associated with complex fractures and more complications.

Key Study Finding This is the first study to assess the implications of obesity on this type of a fracture and it validates the public health efforts in combating childhood obesity.

Similar studies also have shown that overweight children who break their femur (thigh bone) are more likely to need bigger surgery and have more complications than children who are not overweight.

"Future research needs to focus on modifying obesity in kids to test if that changes fracture complexity and complication profiles," Caird added. "We also should focus on research to improve childhood bone health overall whether this is more calcium, vitamin D, exercise or a combination of such measures to help further build and maintain a skeleton that can structurally and metabolically support the person through their lifetime."

INFORMATION:

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) has more information about Fitness for Kids and encourages people of all ages to Get Up! Get Out! and Get Moving!

The AAOS provides treatment guidelines based on the latest research. These are recommendations only and may not apply to each and every individual case: Guideline on the Treatment of Pediatric Supracondylar Humerus Fractures.

Disclosure: None of the authors received payments or services, either directly or indirectly (i.e., via his or her institution), from a third party in support of any aspect of this work. One or more of the authors, or his or her institution, has had a financial relationship, in the 36 months prior to submission of this work, with an entity in the biomedical arena that could be perceived to influence or have the potential to influence what is written in this work. No author has had any other relationships, or has engaged in any other activities, that could be perceived to influence or have the potential to influence what is written in this work.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Giant mass extinction may have been quicker than previously thought

2014-02-11
The largest mass extinction in the history of animal life occurred some 252 million years ago, wiping out more than 96 percent of marine species and 70 percent of life on land — including the largest insects known to have inhabited the Earth. Multiple theories have aimed to explain the cause of what's now known as the end-Permian extinction, including an asteroid impact, massive volcanic eruptions, or a cataclysmic cascade of environmental events. But pinpointing the cause of the extinction requires better measurements of how long the extinction period lasted. Now researchers ...

High pollutant levels in Guánica Bay 'represent serious toxic threat' to corals

High pollutant levels in Guánica Bay represent serious toxic threat to corals
2014-02-11
The pollutants measured in the sediments of Guánica Bay, Puerto Rico, in a new NOAA study were among the highest concentrations of PCBs, chlordane, chromium and nickel ever measured in the history of NOAA's National Status & Trends, a nationwide contaminant monitoring program that began in 1986. Researchers from the National Ocean Service's National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS) studied the reef's ecology to help establish baseline conditions that coastal managers can use to measure changes resulting from new efforts to manage pollution. Among the items studied ...

Design prototype chip makes possible a fully implantable cochlear implant

2014-02-11
BOSTON (Feb. 10, 2014) — Researchers from Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Harvard Medical School, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have designed a prototype system-on-chip (SoC) that could make possible a fully implanted cochlear implant. They will present their findings on Feb. 11at the IEEE International Solid State Circuits Conference in San Francisco. A cochlear implant is a device that electronically stimulates the auditory nerve to restore hearing in people with profound hearing loss. Conventional cochlear implants are made up of an external unit with ...

NASA's TRMM satellite eyes rainfall in Tropical Cyclone Fobane

NASAs TRMM satellite eyes rainfall in Tropical Cyclone Fobane
2014-02-11
Some towering thunderstorms were spotted in Tropical Cyclone Fobane as NASA's TRMM satellite passed over the Southern Indian Ocean on February 10. Fobane was formerly Tropical Cyclone 14S and when it strengthened into a tropical storm it was renamed. NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency manages the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite known as TRMM. TRMM has the capability to measure rainfall rates from space and data that can be used to determine the heights of thunderstorms that make up a storm. When TRMM passed over Tropical Cyclone Fobane on February ...

Cars, computers, TVs spark obesity in developing countries

2014-02-11
The spread of obesity and type-2 diabetes could become epidemic in low-income countries, as more individuals are able to own higher priced items such as TVs, computers and cars. The findings of an international study, led by Simon Fraser University health sciences professor Scott Lear, are published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Lear headed an international research team that analyzed data on more than 150,000 adults from 17 countries, ranging from high and middle income to low-income nations. Researchers, who questioned participants about ownership ...

Recycling of 'chauffeur protein' helps regulate fat production

2014-02-11
Studying a cycle of protein interactions needed to make fat, Johns Hopkins researchers say they have discovered a biological switch that regulates a protein that causes fatty liver disease in mice. Their findings, they report, may help develop drugs to decrease excessive fat production and its associated conditions in people, including fatty liver disease and diabetes. A summary of the research appeared online on Jan. 29 in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. "We've learned how the body finely tunes levels of a protein called SCAP that is required to turn on fat production ...

Long distance signals protect brain from viral infections

2014-02-11
The brain contains a defense system that prevents at least two unrelated viruses—and possibly many more—from invading the brain at large. The research is published online ahead of print in the Journal of Virology. "Our work points to the remarkable ability of the immune system, even within the brain, to protect us against opportunistic viruses," says Anthony van den Pol of Yale University, an author on the study. The research explains a long-standing mystery. The olfactory mucosa in the nose can serve as a conduit for a number of viruses to enter the brain including ...

Mayo Clinic identifies a key cellular pathway in prostate cancer

2014-02-11
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic researchers have shed light on a new mechanism by which prostate cancer develops in men. Central to development of nearly all prostate cancer cases are malfunctions in the androgen receptor — the cellular component that binds to male hormones. The research team has shown that SPOP, a protein that is most frequently mutated in human prostate cancers, is a key regulator of androgen receptor activity that prevents uncontrolled growth of cells in the prostate and thus helps prevent cancer. The findings appear in the journal Cell Reports. "By ...

Flowing water on Mars appears likely but hard to prove

Flowing water on Mars appears likely but hard to prove
2014-02-11
Martian experts have known since 2011 that mysterious, possibly water-related streaks appear and disappear on the planet's surface. Georgia Institute of Technology Ph.D. candidate Lujendra Ojha discovered them while an undergraduate at the University of Arizona. These features were given the descriptive name of recurring slope lineae (RSL) because of their shape, annual reappearance and occurrence generally on steep slopes such as crater walls. Ojha has been taking a closer look at this phenomenon, searching for minerals that RSL might leave in their wake, to try to understand ...

With their amazing necks, ants don't need 'high hopes' to do heavy lifting

With their amazing necks, ants dont need high hopes to do heavy lifting
2014-02-11
COLUMBUS, Ohio—High hopes may help move a rubber tree plant (as the old song goes), but the real secret to the ant's legendary strength may lie in its tiny neck joint. In the Journal of Biomechanics, researchers report that the neck joint of a common American field ant can withstand pressures up to 5,000 times the ant's weight. "Ants are impressive mechanical systems—astounding, really," said Carlos Castro, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at The Ohio State University. "Before we started, we made a somewhat conservative estimate that they ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Disconnected from math, students call for real-world relevance in RAND’s first-ever youth survey

Three Hebrew University researchers win prestigious ERC Advanced Grants for pioneering work

Illuminated changes: Enhancing D-lactic acid output with UV irradiation

From food to textile – agricultural waste can become the clothes of the future

Claire Foldi advances eating disorder neuroscience research

Yes, in my back yard: people who live near large-scale solar projects are happy to have more built nearby

Easily attach nanoparticles like toy blocks for industrial use!

LEGO improves maths and spatial ability in the classroom

Despite overall progress, low birthweight rates still high in certain Indian states

Train teachers on how to get parents involved in children’s learning, say researchers

Evolution made us cheats, now free-riders run the world and we need to change, new book warns

Report outlines blueprint to grow Australia’s bioeconomy

Medicaid cuts in the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" could undermine the coverage, financial well-being, medical care, and health of low-income Americans, and lead to more than 16,500 medically-preventab

Groundbreaking TACIT algorithm offers new promise in diagnosing, treating cancer

Long-term study reveals Native seeding controls annual, but not perennial, invasive plants in sand grassland restoration

Printed energy storage charges into the future with MXene inks

Exposure to low levels of arsenic in public drinking water linked to lower birthweight, preterm birth, study finds

AMS Science Preview: Gun violence & weather; NOAA flights improve hurricane forecasts; atmospheric rivers and radio waves

New strategy for the treatment of severe childhood cancer

Krill fishing in the Antarctic: overlaps with consequences

Link found between mitochondria and MS brain damage

More family doctors near retirement, raising concern about future of primary care

Feeding smarter: mannanase improves broiler growth even with less soy and energy

Sports arenas — the importance of politics, fan response and public money

Mapping the genetic landscape of yellow catfish for sustainable aquaculture

Effect of respiratory phase on three-dimensional quantitative parameters of pulmonary subsolid nodules in low-dose computed tomography screening for lung cancer

USC-led team sheds light on dark matter by simulating twins of our Milky Way galaxy

Researchers identify previously uncharacterized gene necessary for DNA repair

Clearing out the clutter: how people retain important information from memories

High blood pressure in pregnancy linked to increased risk of seizure in children

[Press-News.org] Obese children more likely to have complex elbow fractures and further complications
Study authors urge parents to keep kids active and strengthen bones early