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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Identifying and intervening with
overweight
children may decrease their likelihood of developing
heart disease
later in life. This secondary analysis of 58 children in the 3rd grade examined the prevalence of
overweight
children, methods for measuring
overweight
status, and the relationship among these measures and other risk factors for
heart disease
. Approximately one third of the 58 children were categorized as
overweight
. Several measures, such as weight, body fat percentage, body mass index (BMI), and skin-fold, are available to school nurses for measuring
overweight
status. The highest correlations were between BMI and weight and between BMI and body fat. Anthropometric measurements cannot predict cholesterol level, 24-hour diet recall, or family history. Blood pressure can be predicted by weight, body fat percentage, and BMI. BMI and body fat percentage highly correlate; however, body fat percentage is more liberal in identifying children at risk for
overweight
status. Therefore, body fat percentage is recommended for identification of
overweight
status in school-age children.
...
PMID:Measures of overweight status in school-age children. 1275 82
Obesity is a progressive disease of unwanted fat accumulation which has multiple, organ-specific pathological consequences. The manifestations of obesity occur within virtually every subspecialty of medicine or surgery and they interact importantly to accelerate the ageing process in many organs. Many of the hazards of obesity have multiple causes (e.g., diabetes,
heart disease
, stroke, colonic and breast cancer, urinary incontinence, tiredness, back pain, breathlessness). All of these conditions become more prevalent with age and are also more prevalent among
overweight
persons, particularly those with a central fat distribution marked by a high waist circumference. Hypertension may be caused or aggravated by weight gain. It is mediated by the physical demands of an expanded circulating volume and increased metabolic rate by metabolic mechanisms related to central fat distribution and the "metabolic syndrome", and to increased sodium consumption by
overweight
people (because they need more food to maintain a higher metabolic rate). Since body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference increase significantly with age there is an escalation of the burden of ill health from obesity with age. The best simple indicator of disease risk with obesity is the waist circumference since this identifies people who have a high body fat content and also those who have an increased intraabdominal accumulation of fat. The quantitative burden of ill health from
overweight
and obesity varies within different specialties, but up to 80% of type 2 diabetes or polycystic ovarian syndrome can be attributed to obesity. Obesity is the cause of sleep apnea syndrome in around 50% of cases and
heart disease
in perhaps 10-20% of cases. In Scotland 80% of people with existing cardiovascular disease are
overweight
compared with 57% of the general population. The financial burden to health services from
overweight
and obesity has been incompletely assessed, although it is estimated that around 4% of total health care budgets are attributable to people having BMI > 25 kg/m(2). This is similar to the entire cost of diabetes, epilepsy or major cancers. Obesity is therefore an extremely expensive disease based on these conservative estimates from limited evaluations. More general assessments show how obesity increases the amount of time taken off work, the number of drugs prescribed and the expenditure from social services support. Thus, obesity represents a huge burden not only on the individual patient physically, psychologically, socially and financially but also on families and careers and is a huge drain on health care resources.
Overweight
affects well over half of all adults worldwide, progressing to BMI > 30 kg/m(2) in around 20% outside subsistence rural communities. Its rapidly increasing prevalence now described as an epidemic demands major preventive measures, as well as better medical treatment for individuals affected.
...
PMID:Obesity: burdens of illness and strategies for prevention or management. 1284 36
Ischaemic
Heart Disease
(IHD) is still an essential health problem in many countries. In Poland it is one of the leading causes of cardiac deaths, while in western countries and in the USA mortality rate due to heart diseases decreases. The prevention of coronary vessels diseases is a long and a hard process. There is a need to start an early prophylactic action. The programs of primary and secondary prevention should be directed to as many people as possible. In individual strategy any action should be based on the assessment of the degree of complete risk with regard to every single person. Directives and standards elaborated by the Committee of Prophylaxis are helpful. In this research the group of 105 health service female workers were prepared to carry out further preventive searches towards the IHD danger. The following factors were taken into account: the level of total cholesterol (LDL, HDL and triglycerides level), hypertension, cigarette smoking,
overweight
and obesity, diabetes. The factors mentioned above defined as global risk elements were examined among three age groups: 35-39 years, 40-45 years, 46-50 years. Coronary hazard was established in accordance with the Card of Prophylaxis IHD of Polish Cardiological Society. The main purpose of this research was to identify the IHD risk factors as well as to evaluate its danger among women.
...
PMID:[Occurrence of risk factors for ischemic heart disease among women--health service workers]. 1452 77
Overweight
and abdominal obesity increase mortality risk, although the risk may be mediated by traditional cardiac risk factors. The authors assessed the association of baseline measures, change in overall body weight and abdominal obesity (waist circumference), and weight and waist circumference cycling with total mortality among postmenopausal women with known
heart disease
. They used data from 2,739 US women who participated in the Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study between 1993 and 2001. Over 6.8 years of follow-up, 498 women died. In adjusted Cox models that included either baseline waist circumference or body mass index (BMI), each was associated with mortality. However, after further adjustment for diabetes, hypertension, and lipoproteins, these associations disappeared. In models including both waist circumference and BMI, larger waist circumference (hazard ratio=1.40 per standard deviation, 95% confidence interval: 1.16, 1.68) was associated with increased risk and higher BMI (hazard ratio=0.81 per standard deviation, 95% confidence interval: 0.67, 0.97) was associated with decreased risk of total mortality, independent of cardiac risk factors. Weight and waist circumference cycling were not associated with mortality. Results show that both BMI and waist circumference are associated with mortality among postmenopausal women with established
heart disease
, but waist circumference may be more important than BMI, and their effects may be largely mediated by other cardiac risk factors.
...
PMID:Association of total and central obesity with mortality in postmenopausal women with coronary heart disease. 1465 1
Current statistics on global obesity are staggering. In 2002, the International Obesity Task Force estimated that worldwide, nearly 1 billion (6%) people were
overweight
or obese. The American Heart Association's 2002: "Top 10" Research Advances for the Treatment of
Heart Disease
include obesity as a strong and independent risk factor for developing heart failure. This article outlines national and world statistics, cardiac risk factors, and pathophysiologic theories outlining the cellular mechanisms that associate obesity and heart failure. Access to guidelines for effective screening, evaluation, and treatment of obesity are also provided.
...
PMID:Obesity and heart failure. 1468 Mar 39
The burgeoning problem of
overweight
and obesity in US children, adolescents, and adults has reached epidemic proportions. Data from the CRRIC I study conducted in 2000 in Jackson, Mississippi among elementary African-American children indicated that 39% of the boys and 49% of the girls had BMIs at or above the 85th percentile. The current study replicated CRRIC I in a sample of 113 African American Children in the third and fourth grades in the rural town of Canton, Mississippi. Results revealed that 46% of the boys and 46% of the girls had BMI at or above the 85th percentile. Fitness profile results revealed that only 11% of the children were classified as fit, 84% were classified as fair, and 5% were deemed unfit. As in CRRIC I, health histories of grandparents were positive for the comorbities of
overweight
and obesity: diabetes, stroke, and
heart disease
. These data indicate a critical need to aggressively intervene to impact the lifestyle choices of this generation.
...
PMID:A descriptive analysis of CRRIC II results: cardiovascular risks of African-American children in Mississippi. 1469 77
Studies have shown that about 30 per cent of people who have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) lose weight. Weight loss has been shown to be associated with a reduction in lung function (Poole, 1993). Conversely, patients who are
overweight
have an increased respiratory workload due to their extra weight. Excess weight also increases the risk of hypertension, diabetes,
heart disease
and osteoarthritis (Collins, 2003). Many patients are unaware of changes in their nutritional status. The case study in Box 1 provides an illustration of this.
...
PMID:Providing nutritional information to people with lung disease. 1500 32
Obesity is a serious problem in the United States and is associated with hypertension, diabetes, and other health problems such as
heart disease
and some forms of cancer. There is a higher prevalence of being
overweight
among African American adults than among their Caucasian counterparts. The objective of this study was to assess baseline health behaviors and health status (hypertension, body mass indices, cholesterol and blood sugar levels) of African Americans participating in a community-based health education and physical fitness program. The sample consisted of 1.34 African American adults (30% males) from a low-income urban area in the Midwest. A health survey was administered to assess their health behaviors and previously diagnosed health problems. Additional data was obtained from health screenings to obtain current information on height, weight, and blood sugar, blood pressure and cholesterol levels. In addition to the sample being markedly
overweight
and obese (30% and 60% respectively), the results of the health screenings indicated a disproportionate number of participants (62%) with hypertension; 74% of the male participants had high blood pressure. Moreover, the self-reported data suggested that the participants had poor eating habits, sedentary lifestyles, and previously diagnosed health conditions (hypertension, diabetes, and high cholesterol levels) that were comparable to the results of their health screenings. These findings suggest that culturally-relevant, community-based programs that incorporate both nutritionl education and physical fitness are needed in order to educate and motivate participants to decrease behaviors that put them at risk for obesity and other health related problems.
...
PMID:Baseline assessment of the health status and health behaviors of African Americans participating in the activities-for-life program: a community-based health intervention program. 1518 16
Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of death worldwide and is responsible for 45% of deaths in the western world and 24.5% of deaths in the developing countries. In the 21st century these diseases will continue to dominate the disease spectrum and death statistics in both the industrialised and developing worlds. Since 1975 mortality from cardiovascular disease has decreased by about 24 to 28% in most countries. About 45% of this reduction can be attributed to an improvement in treatment of coronary heart disease and around 55% are attributable to a reduction in risk factors, in particular, stopping smoking and control of hypertension. However, especially in the case of ischaemic heart disease, it is not clear whether the reduction in mortality reflects a reduction in incidence of this disease. Due to the aging population and the reduction in age-related mortality, it is expected that the absolute number of people with
heart disease
will increase. Furthermore, the increase in prevalence of obesity, metabolic syndrome, type II diabetes as well as the higher prevalence of female smokers compared with thirty years ago could result in an increase in mortality over the next years and decades. It has been shown that prevention strategies, such as education campaigns aimed at the general public, can potentially greatly contribute to a reduction in incidence of cardiovascular disease at every stage. In order for such campaigns to be effective, it is necessary to understand and reduce the risk factors for cardiovascular disease. A large proportion of these risk factors are associated with lifestyle and are therefore modifiable. These modifiable risk factors include smoking, hypertension, poor diet, dyslipidemia, lack of exercise,
overweight
, adiposity and diabetes mellitus and optimisation of these should be a key aim for all adults. Gender differences also play a role in the incidence and prevention of cardiovascular disease. Incidence of myocardial infarction in women increases significantly after the menopause, and mortality through coronary heart disease is higher amongst women than men. Hormonal status, use of oral contraceptives and pregnancy all influence risk for cardiovascular disease in women. Due to the enormity of the problem that cardiovascular disease presents to society and the great potential for management of risk factors for cardiovascular disease through preventive medicine, a number of health promotion and prevention programmes have been initiated by various national and global organisations. This paper presents an analysis of modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease together with a review of targeted prevention programmes aiming at reducing these risks.
...
PMID:[Risk management of coronary heart disease-prevention]. 1528 2
The purpose of this study was to examine dietary patterns and cardiovascular risk factors in Hispanic adults living in Southwest Detroit. A descriptive design was used. Self-report baseline data were collected using The Rate Your Plate and Personal Health Risk Assessment questionnaires. A nonrandom sample of 32 Mexican American adults was recruited from a large Roman Catholic Church in Southwest Detroit. Participants were selected if they were enrolled in the larger parent research study to test the effects of a lay health educator intervention and planned to participate in the nutrition education portion of the intervention. Unhealthy eating patterns outnumbered heart healthy eating practices. The majority used higher fat salad dressings; ate fried foods, sweets, and high fat snacks; consumed greater than the desired amounts of regular cheese; drank whole milk; and ate few fruits and vegetables. Lack of physical activity, being
overweight
, and exposure to second-hand smoke were the most prevalent cardiovascular risk factors. The data suggest that effective community-based
heart disease
prevention programs that emphasize risk factor screening and cardiovascular risk reduction through heart healthy eating are needed.
...
PMID:Eating patterns and cardiovascular disease risk in a Detroit Mexican American population. 1536 23
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