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Children can outgrow obesity - boys more than girls

Date: Jul-31-2013
Researchers have developed a model revealing how excessive calorie intake can affect the weight of children and adolescents, suggesting that children can grow out of obesity, according to a study published in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology.

Researchers from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, as well as the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, say the model could lead to the development of new weight-loss programs for obese and overweight children.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), childhood obesity has more than doubled in the past 30 years. Statistics in 2010 showed that more than a third of children and adolescents were overweight or obese.

The study authors describe this model as a "mathematical representation" of the energy balance principle, wherein changes in bodyweight are calculated to analyze the relationship between the calories consumed in food and the energy used up by the body in order to carry out physical work.

The model analyzes how children's metabolism, growth and energy expenditure can change as they gain weight.

First model to distinguish abnormal from normal weight gain

The researchers say this model is the first to differentiate between the healthy weight gain that is normal in childhood and the excessive weight gain that results in obesity.

They add that it provides an accurate representation of how a child's energy balance can affect their weight gain.

The model was tested against data from previous studies that assessed the effects of a variety of weight loss interventions in overweight and obese treatments. This model was the most accurate tool in predicting the effect of calorie intake on weight loss in children, the researchers say.

Results predicted increases in energy intake between the ages of 5 and 18 of around 1,200 kcal a day in boys and 900 kcal a day in girls.
Children could 'outgrow' obesity

The model shows how some children could "outgrow" obesity during growth spurts, without changing their bodyweight, the study authors say.

For example, boys who are obese but maintain the same bodyweight during their growth spurts - which are more prominent between the ages of 11 and 16 - are likely to "normalize" their body fat as they grow taller and add lean tissue mass.

The researchers say, however, that this is less likely in girls as they tend to lose less body fat compared with boys, who tend to grow taller.
Potential for better weight loss interventions

The study authors say that this model could lead to a greater understanding within clinicians and policy makers of how weight loss treatments, such as exercise programs and calorie-controlled diets, can be used to determine the best and most effective way of addressing childhood obesity.

Dr. Kevin Hall, lead study author, says: "One of the most disconcerting aspects of the global obesity epidemic is the high prevalence of childhood obesity, which carries both health and economic consequences." He adds:

"The model we have developed is a substantial step forward in fighting this rising tide of childhood obesity. It allows us to accurately predict how a child's energy intake affects his or her likelihood of becoming overweight or obese."

However, the researchers say that this model may not be accurate in predicting the risk of obesity in all children.

"Though the model doesn't apply perfectly to all children - for instance, those who start adolescence late, or who undergo particularly rapid weight gain - it provides an accurate representation of the average effect of reducing or increasing calorie intake on the weight of children," says Dr. Kevin Hall, adding:

"Our future research will adapt the model to individual children as well as study the effects of increasing physical activity along with diet changes."
Families 'should be educated' on children's diets

Professor Claudio Maffeis of the department of life and reproduction sciences at the University of Verona, Italy, makes a comment in a follow-up to the study, stressing the "importance" of this research and saying it needs to be backed up by increasing parental knowledge.

He says: "To translate into practice these desired changes in energy balance, it will be necessary to increase families' knowledge and awareness of energy content and composition of children's diets by designing effective and sustainable educational programs about nutrition."

Written by Honor Whiteman

Copyright: Medical News Today

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Courtesy: Medical News Today
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