Archive for May, 2005

What is Metabolic Syndrome? And Why Should You Care If You Have It?

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

Recent data from Australia and the U.S. suggest that 25% adults in each may have the metabolic syndrome.

What is metabolic syndrome? It had 6 definitions, beginning with WHO in 1999, but now there is a consensus metabolic syndrome definition. It is central obesity (more like an apple than a pear–waist of 40 inches (94 cm) for Caucasian men and 35 inches (80 cm) for women, with ethnic-specific levels in Chinese, Japanese and South Asians; and 2 of the following:
*high triglycerides of at 150 mg/dL;
*low HDL-cholesterol, of less than 40 mg/dL in men and 50 mg/dL in women;
*higher blood pressure (130/85 mm Hg or higher); and
*a high fasting blood sugar (over 100mg/dL), or previous diagnosis of diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance.

That’s a mouthful, but it’s not filling: insurance companies may begin to pay for treatment for metabolic syndrome, because effective treatment can prevent diabetes (excellent resources here), prevent high blood pressure, and reduce the risk for heart attack, stroke, impotence, premature wrinkling and memory loss.

Do you have metabolic syndrome? Measure your waist correctly. Get a blood test for a cholesterol panel, at home if you like. Most of all, know the facts: you can control how you age with your choices, and using food-as-medicine is one of the best to make now.

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Early life risk factors for obesity in childhood: A British Study of Parents and Toddlers

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

The top early life risk factors for pediatric obesity have just published in the British Medical Journal. The top three are parental obesity; very early (by 43 months) BMI rebound; and more than 8 hours spent watching TV per week at age 3 years. Early weight gain–this early–can be deadly. Change your weight, change your baby’s.

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