
- Volume 0 0
Obesity and Heart Enlargement Among the Young
According to the American Heart Association, obesity raises blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels while lowering high-density lipoprotein, the good cholesterol. Now a study by the Cincinnati Children?s Hospital has revealed another damaging effect?enlarged hearts. Of the 575 healthy women examined, 25% had the condition. Even more disturbing, 20% of the study participants were found to have left ventricular hypertrophy, an enlargement of the heart?s main pumping chamber that often leads to congestive heart failure. Most disturbing of all, however, is the fact that the average age of the group was 20 years old. Fortunately, evidence shows that ventricular hypertrophy can be stopped or reversed through diet or medication, but a dramatic weight loss is also necessary. Best bet: Counsel patients to not let kids become obese in the first place.
Articles in this issue
over 23 years ago
Blood Pressure Drugs May Improve Fitness in the Elderlyover 23 years ago
Fast Facts on Osteoporosisover 23 years ago
Take Tea and See?Higher Bone Densityover 23 years ago
New Fish Advisory Coming for Pregnant Womenover 23 years ago
Fitness Mattersover 23 years ago
Systolic Measurement Better Indicator of Mortality Riskover 23 years ago
Higher Activity = Lower Blood Pressureover 23 years ago
Juan Valdez and Starbucks Would Smileover 23 years ago
ASTHMA Underdiagnosed and Undertreatedover 23 years ago
Pharmacists Important Asthma CounselorsNewsletter
Stay informed on drug updates, treatment guidelines, and pharmacy practice trends—subscribe to Pharmacy Times for weekly clinical insights.