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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Obesity now affects one in five children in the United States. Discrimination against overweight children begins early in childhood and becomes progressively institutionalized. Because obese children tend to be taller than their nonoverweight peers, they are apt to be viewed as more mature. The inappropriate expectations that result may have an adverse effect on their socialization. Many of the cardiovascular consequences that characterize adult-onset obesity are preceded by abnormalities that begin in childhood. Hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and abnormal glucose tolerance occur with increased frequency in obese children and adolescents. The relationship of cardiovascular risk factors to visceral fat independent of total body fat remains unclear.
Sleep apnea
, pseudotumor cerebri, and
Blount's disease
represent major sources of morbidity for which rapid and sustained weight reduction is essential. Although several periods of increased risk appear in childhood, it is not clear whether obesity with onset early in childhood carries a greater risk of adult morbidity and mortality. Obesity is now the most prevalent nutritional disease of children and adolescents in the United States. Although obesity-associated morbidities occur more frequently in adults, significant consequences of obesity as well as the antecedents of adult disease occur in obese children and adolescents. In this review, I consider the adverse effects of obesity in children and adolescents and attempt to outline areas for future research. I refer to obesity as a body mass index greater than the 95th percentile for children of the same age and gender.
...
PMID:Health consequences of obesity in youth: childhood predictors of adult disease. 1222 58
Morbid obesity and its association with obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome have been increasingly recognised in children. Orthopaedic surgeons are often the primary medical contact for older children with
tibia vara
, which has long been associated with obesity, but are unfamiliar with the evaluation and treatment of
sleep apnoea
in children. We reviewed all children with
tibia vara
treated surgically at one of our institutions over a period of five years. Thirty-seven patients were identified; 18 were nine years of age or older and 13 of these (72%) had morbid obesity and a history of snoring. Eleven children were diagnosed as having
sleep apnoea
on polysomnography. The incidence of this syndrome in the 18 children aged nine years or older with
tibia vara
, was 61%. All these patients required pre-operative non-invasive positive-pressure ventilation; tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy were necessary in five (45%). No peri-operative complications related to the airway occurred. There is a high incidence of
sleep apnoea
in morbidly obese patients with
tibia vara
. These patients should be screened for snoring and, if present, should be further evaluated for
sleep apnoea
before corrective surgery is undertaken.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome in morbidly obese children with tibia vara. 1636 29