19 research outputs found

    The Impact of Familial Predisposition to Obesity and Cardiovascular Disease on Childhood Obesity

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    The prevalence of childhood obesity has reached alarming rates world-wide. The aetiology seems to be an interplay between genetic and environmental factors, and a surrogate measure of this complex interaction is suggested as familial predisposition. Familial predisposition to obesity and related cardiovascular disease (CVD) complications constitute the presence of obesity and/or obesity-related complications in primarily blood-related family members. The approaches of its measurement and applicability vary, and the evidence especially of its influence on obesity and obesity treatment in childhood is limited. Studies have linked a familial predisposition of obesity, CVD (hypertension, dyslipidaemia and thromboembolic events), and type 2 diabetes mellitus to BMI as well as other adiposity measures in children, suggesting degrees of familial aggregation of metabolic derangements. A pattern of predispositions arising from mothers, parents or grandparents as being most influential have been found, but further comprehensive studies are needed in order to specify the exact implications of familial predisposition. In the scope of childhood obesity this article reviews the current literature regarding familial predisposition to obesity and obesity-related complications, and how these familial predispositions may impact obesity in the offspring

    Longitudinal evaluation of an mHealth overweight and obesity management tool

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    BACKGROUND: Efficient obesity treatment protocols are lacking. This study reports treatment results from a web-based application, originally developed for use in an in-person healthcare setting providing health, overweight, and obesity management. METHODS: The web application DrHolmApp (WADHA) was evaluated in adult users two years after it was launched. The WADHA provides a personal and tailored treatment plan comprising a series of detailed action advices on everyday life, constructed from the user’s input to a thorough online questionnaire. Throughout the subscription period, the WADHA users have full access to online healthcare professional support. We conducted a longitudinal cohort study using self-reported data. RESULTS: This study included 940 adult WADHA users (861 female). The median body mass index (BMI) change across all WADHA users was –0.63 BMI points (95% CI: –0.7 to –0.57, P<0.001). 665 (71%) of all WADHA users reduced their BMI (median reduction: 0.94, 95% CI: 0.88 to 1.02). In the subset with obesity (n=675), BMI was reduced in 72%. The median number of days per week with physical activity for at least one hour per day increased with 1.5 days per week (from 2 days per week at baseline, P<0.001). Subsequently, the WADHA users improved their mood, quality of life, and body image satisfaction and reduced their appetite, bullying, and wish for weight loss (all P<0.001). A higher number of consultations associated with greater weight loss (P<0.001) independent of age and degree of obesity at treatment initiation. CONCLUSIONS: Seventy-one percent of the WADHA users experienced weight loss, concomitant to an increased level of physical activity, improved mood, quality of life, and body image satisfaction, and reduced appetite, degree of bullying, and wish for weight loss. KEYWORDS: Body mass index (BMI); mobile health (mHealth); obesity; treatment; weight los

    Multidisciplinary care of obese children and adolescents for one year reduces ectopic fat content in liver and skeletal muscle

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    BACKGROUND: Ectopic fat deposition in liver and skeletal muscle tissue is related to cardiovascular disease risk and is a common metabolic complication in obese children. We evaluated the hypotheses of ectopic fat in these organs could be diminished following 1 year of multidisciplinary care specialized in childhood obesity, and whether this reduction would associate with changes in other markers of metabolic function. METHODS: This observational longitudinal study evaluated 40 overweight children and adolescents enrolled in a multidisciplinary treatment protocol at the Children’s Obesity Clinic, Holbæk, Denmark. The participants were assessed by anthropometry, fasting blood samples (HbA1c, glucose, insulin, lipids, and biochemical variables of liver function), and liver and muscle fat content assessed by magnetic resonance spectroscopy at enrollment and following an average of 12.2 months of care. Univariate linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, treatment duration, baseline degree of obesity, and pubertal developmental stage were used for investigating possible associations. RESULTS: The standard deviation score (SDS) of baseline median body mass index (BMI) was 2.80 (range: 1.49–3.85) and the median age was 14 years (10–17). At the end of the observational period, the 40 children and adolescents (21 girls) significantly decreased their BMI SDS, liver fat, muscle fat, and visceral adipose tissue volume. The prevalence of hepatic steatosis changed from 28 to 20 % (p = 0.26) and the prevalence of muscular steatosis decreased from 75 to 45 % (p = 0.007). Changes in liver and muscle fat were independent of changes in BMI SDS, baseline degree of obesity, duration of treatment, age, sex, and pubertal developmental stage. CONCLUSIONS: A 1-year multidisciplinary intervention program in the setting of a childhood obesity outpatient clinic confers a biologically important reduction in liver and muscle fat; metabolic improvements that are independent of the magnitude of concurrent weight loss. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov registration number: NCT00928473, the Danish Childhood Obesity Biobank. Registered June 25, 2009. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12887-015-0513-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
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