Study finds 3.3% city children suffering from high blood pressure

CHILDREN

A multicentre, cross-sectional study which was conducted on 10,842 children in five cities — Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Pune and Raipur — has found that 3.3 per cent or 358 children were hypertensive.

Dr Archana Dayal Arya, paediatric endocrinologist, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, and co-author of the study, said, “The prevalence of childhood obesity is rising in developing countries including India. Abdominal obesity is also on the rise and is associated with increased risk for metabolic syndrome (MS).”

MS in children has been defined as the presence of > or =3 of the following criteria: high triglyceride levels in blood, low HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol), increased fasting blood glucose levels, high systolic blood pressure and waist circumference > 75th percentile.

According to Dr Arya, MS results in increased risk for hypertension, type-2 diabetes mellitus, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

“In my daily practice, I am seeing many children who are getting diseases which were earlier seen only in adults, primarily because of obesity. It is shocking to see children as young as 6 years old with diseases like hypertension, diabetes mellitus and abnormalities in the lipid profile. In this study we found 350 children suffering from hypertension,” said Dr Arya.

The study has suggested cut-off values of waist circumference for screening for metabolic syndrome in Indian children. It has also developed age and sex specific reference curves for waist circumference for Indian children.

The study, which appears in The Journal of Paediatrics, also found that risk factor for Indian children for developing MS was at 70th waist circumference percentile, which is significantly lower than international proposed WC cut-off of 90th percentile.

Dr Anuradha Khadilkar, consultant paediatrician, Jehangir Hospital, Pune and corresponding author of the study, said, “We found in the study that primary or essential hypertension, commonly seen in adults, is becoming common in children, who are obese or overweight. Therefore it is very essential for them to change their lifestyle and lose weight. They should be encouraged to participate in outdoor sports and other physical activities. They should cut down on the intake of high calorie foods with poor nutritional value (junk food) and a high fat diet.”

Source: India medical times


SRL Diagnostics introduces ST2 biomarker to predict heart failure

breakthrough-technique-to-predict-heart-failure

SRL Diagnostics on Monday announced the launch of new lab test ST2 to help predict risks of coronary heart disease by finding a specific biomarker in the bloodstream.

SRL claims to be the first diagnostic lab in India to have launched this key medical test, available across India at all Fortis Labs, SRL Diagnostics Labs and its collection centres.

Dr B R Das, president – research & innovation, SRL Diagnostics, said, “Unlike many other cardiac biomarkers, ST2 is faster thus helping physicians make informed decisions on an appropriate course of action to take and, if needed, to quickly adjust treatment. It can reduce 30-day rehospitalisation rates by 17.3 per cent and also reduce 30-day mortality rates by 17.6 per cent.”

Recent evidence has reported the incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) to be 40 to 50 per cent higher in Asian Indians than individuals of other ethnic origins. In addition, some 30 to 40 per cent of cardiovascular deaths occur between 35 and 64 years of age. The prevalence of heart failure in India due to coronary heart disease, hypertension, obesity, diabetes and rheumatic heart disease ranges from 1.3 million to 4.6 million, with an annual incidence of 4,91,600–1.8 million, according to a statement by SRL.

“ST2 is ELISA based test which is a US FDA approved technology and was included in 2013 ACC/AHA Guidelines for The Management of Heart Failure. It has been extensively evaluated with more than 100 peer-reviewed articles and scientific posters studying more than 35,000 patients. So far, SRL Diagnostics has collected 100 samples for predicting the heart failure,” Dr Das added.

The American College of Cardiology Foundation / American Heart Association Task Force jointly released its expanded clinical practice guideline for the management of patients with heart failure and has identified ST2 “not only predictive of hospitalization and death in patients with HF [heart failure] but also additive to natriuretic peptide levels in its prognostic value.

Source: India medical Times


Protein could bring hope to brittle bone disease

osteoporotic_bone,_sem-spl

A discovery in mice could help to treat people with a form of brittle bone disease, scientists said.

In an American study, mice were bred with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) and the activity of a protein which shapes and reshapes bones was monitored. Scientists said intense activity of the protein in the mice was linked to OI.

They said the finding could lead to a new target for treatment, but experts warn the study is in mice and might not apply to humans.

Human trials?
One in 15,000 people in the UK are estimated to have osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). It is an inherited condition, where abnormalities in the genes controlling collagen affect the bone’s strength.

In severe cases, people with OI can have between 200 and 300 fractures by the time they reach age 18, the Brittle Bone Society said. Current treatment is lacking.

Scientists at the Baylor College of Medicine, University of Texas, looked at a protein in mice bred with the condition and compared them to “normal” mice.

They said the activity of transforming growth factor beta (TGF), which co-ordinates the shaping and reshaping of bone, was excessive in mice with OI.

When TGF was blocked with an antibody, the mice’s bones withstood “higher maximum load and ultimate strength” and showed “improved whole bone and tissue strength”, suggesting “resistance to fracture”, the study said.

Research was published in the journal Nature Medicine.

Dr Brendan Lee, professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine, said the study could “move quite quickly” into humans, and be at a clinical trial stage later this year, or early next year.

‘Open doors’
A pharmaceutical company in the US was looking at the pathway of TGF in other diseases, such as kidney disease, which could accelerate the trials, he said. One mechanism behind the findings could be that the disruption of TGF meant the bone was absorbed in the body more quickly than it was made.

Dr Lee added: “We now have a deeper understanding for how genetic mutations that affect collagen and collagen processing enzymes cause weak bones.”

He said the treatment appeared “even more effective” than other existing approaches.

Prof Nick Bishop, is professor at the University of Sheffield and chairman of the Brittle Bone Society’s medical advisory board. He said the study was a “paradigm shifter” as it exposed a possible new target for treatment.

But Prof Bishop said: “This is another mouse study with potential to transfer to humans, we hope, but remember mice are not human.”

He added: “Other treatments that have worked really well in mice with brittle bones, like bone marrow transplantation, haven’t worked as well in humans and are not standard practice as of now.”

Dr Claire Bowring, medical policy manager at the National Osteoporosis Society, said the study was “basic science” in mouse models to understand the “basics of bone biology”.

She said: “It could, in the future, help develop knowledge about bone conditions more fully. As we understand more about bone turnover and communication between bone cells, work could open doors for future research that could affect osteoporosis.”

Dr Bowring said it could take 10 to 15 years for such mouse studies to reach the stage of clinical trials in people.

Source: BBC


Processed cheese and colas kick-start production of harmful hormone

processed-cheese-slices

After sodium and fat content, a new study suggests adding phosphates to the list of unhealthy ingredients to look out for on nutritional labels, after making a connection between high blood pressure, heart disease and phosphate consumption.

Widely used as a food preservative and stabilizer, phosphates can be found in foods like processed cheeses, Parmesan, colas, baking powder and cured meats.

But after looking at the relationship between kidney disease, heart disease and high blood pressure, scientists in Vienna found that large amounts of phosphates can kick-start the production of a hormone called FGF23 in the bones, which puts strain on the heart and can lead to high blood pressure.

In their study, researchers found that mice with low levels of FGF23 excrete higher amounts of sodium in their urine, resulting in low blood pressure.

By contrast, animals with high levels of FGF23 were unable to excrete excess sodium, resulting in high blood pressure.

The problem is particularly worrisome for patients who suffer from kidney disease, as levels of phosphates and FGF23 are chronically high, putting them at increased risk of cardiovascular disease and high blood pressure.
The latest findings, published in the May issue of EMBO Molecular Medicine, build on previous research carried out by the same group that found the same hormone also controls calcium levels. Excess levels of FGF23 were seen to lead to increased take-up of calcium by the kidneys, resulting in vascular calcification.

Foods high in inorganic phosphates that should be limited include processed meats like ham and sausages, canned fish, baked goods, cola and fellow sugary soft drinks.

Source: ctv news


New York City man becomes world’s oldest man at age 111

111 years

The year Alexander Imich was born, Theodore Roosevelt was president and the Wright brothers piloted their first powered airplane. Imich, born in 1903, is the oldest man alive, at age 111.

Imich took the title of oldest male supercentenarian — someone over 110 — when Arturo Licata of Italy died on April 24, just shy of his 112th birthday.

However, Imich is not the oldest person in the world. Sixty-six women are older than him, with the oldest being 116-year-old Misao Okawa of Japan, according to the Gerontology Research Group.

His secrets to longevity? Imich cites the fact that he and his wife never had children, reports The New York Times.

Imich also said he was always athletic and gave up smoking long ago, reports the Times.

Additionally, he doesn’t have a big appetite and eats “like a little bird,” one of Imich’s friends told WABC-TV in New York City.

Imich, a Polish immigrant who lives in New York City, is a scholar of the occult and published a book on paranormal activity at age 92, the Times reports.

Even at age 111, Imich doesn’t have all of life’s answers. He told WABC there’s one thing he’s still trying figure out: “I wanted to understand the universe and myself in it.”

Source: khou


New Tool to Measure the Speed of Aging: Your handshake

ageing

Strong handshake can say a lot about a person — it can indicate power, confidence, health or aggression. Now scientists at Stony Brook University and the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) say that the strength of a person’s grasp may also be one of the most useful ways to measure people’s true age.

In a new study published today in the journal PLOS ONE, IIASA researchers Warren Sanderson, Professor of Economics with joint appointment in History at Stony Brook and Serguei Scherbov show that hand grip corresponds to other markers of aging such as people’s future mortality, disability, cognitive decline and ability to recover from hospital stays.
For their new research, Sanderson and Scherbov reviewed findings from over 50 published studies that focus on people around the world and of all ages. Since the measure is already commonly used, data is readily available.

“Hand-grip strength is easily measured and data on hand-grip strength now can be found in many of the most important surveys on aging worldwide,” says Sanderson.

The study also demonstrates how such a test could be used as a measure for aging to compare different population groups. The study used data from one such survey, the United States Health and Retirement Survey (HRS), to show how this could be done.

Scherbov says, “We found that based on this survey, a 65-year-old white women who had not completed secondary education has the same handgrip strength as a 69-year-old white women who had completed secondary education. This suggests that according to a handgrip strength characteristic their ages are equivalent and 65 year-old women ages 4 years faster due to lower education attainment.”

In a growing body of research funded in part by a new grant from the European Research Council (ERC), Sanderson and Scherbov have begun to define new measures of aging based on people’s characteristics, such as their longevity, health, disability status and other important demographic factors.

Previous research by Sanderson and Scherbov has shown that measuring age simply by the number of years people have lived does not measure variations in the aging process correctly. Using new characteristic-based approaches such as the one in this paper, the researchers can identify differences in the aging process between population groups that may not otherwise become apparent.

Scherbov says, “Our goal is to measure how fast different groups in a society age. If some group is getting older faster than another, we can ask why that might be and see whether there are any policies that could help the faster aging group.”

Source: Science daily


New studies offer evidence of the mind and body benefits of yoga

Cat-Cowpose

The idea that yoga is beneficial is not new. But new studies continue to advance our understanding of the health benefits attained through yoga practice. Three studies reported in the April 2014 issue of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine show that yoga can improve balance and reduce fear of falling, helps to reduce and regulate blood pressure and can improve important aspects of cardiovascular health.

As we age, it is common to experience a loss of balance and an increased risk of injury due to falling. Yoga, with its great emphasis on enhancing overall balance, demonstrates the capacity to reduce age-related imbalance and the tendency for fall-related injuries. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University examined 152 studies on yoga, identifying 15 that assessed balance-related issues. Among these, 11 studies showed that yoga practice can enhance balance, reduce the incidence of balance-related falls and reduce fear of falling – a common issue among seniors.

The balance study was not based on one style of yoga or on one particular practice, but on several styles, and on a number of methods aimed at improving balance, especially one-legged standing poses.

Yoga is low impact and can be adapted to meet the abilities of most people. Yoga practice shows no negative interactions with medications and improves body awareness, a factor in loss of balance. The bottom line of this study was that yoga can improve balance and reduce falls that lead to injury. For seniors, this is a significant gain.

The second yoga study, conducted at the University of South Carolina College of Medicine, examined the effects of Hatha yoga on blood pressure among a group of young people. Hatha yoga is the most commonly practiced of yoga styles. The study involved a group of 28 seventh-graders. Half of the group participated in school-based yoga practice for three months, while the other half attended a music or art class. Among these students, some were pre-hypertensive, meaning they exhibited standard clinical signs of early-stage high blood pressure.

Overall, the students who practiced yoga had lower resting blood pressure and reduced a-amylase activity, a determining factor in high blood pressure, as determined by a variety of tests. Researchers concluded that Hatha yoga helps to decrease resting blood pressure and regulate important nerve and hormonal factors that can lead to blood pressure disorders. This finding is consistent with other assessments of blood pressure among those who practice yoga. Given that high blood pressure is a common problem that can lead to other health complications and increase mortality, this benefit is significant.

The third yoga study, conducted by researchers at Eastern Virginia Medical School, examined a group of Tibetan yogis who engage in an extreme yoga practice known as Tumo, or Tum-Mo, at very high altitude in the freezing Himalayan cold. This technique seems to enable the yogis to maintain normal body temperatures at very cold temperatures, apparently without harm.

Dum-Mo has been studied and filmed by American cardiologist Dr. Herbert Benson, who founded the Mind/Body Medical Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In Benson’s film, the yogis, clad only in loin cloths, sit on the freezing ground melting iced sheets wrapped around their bodies, while members of the film crew huddle in heavy down-filled mountaineering gear.

The Eastern Virginia Medical School study examined various cardiovascular factors of both non-yogis and yogis in sub-zero temperatures. As expected, the non-yogis were not capable of generating inner body heat, and had to be warmed to maintain a healthy body temperature. The Tum-Mo practitioners stayed warm without shivering. Analysis of heart rate, blood pressure and numerous other factors resulted in the conclusion that this mystifying practice somehow enables the Tum-Mo yogis to activate brown fat and generate heat, increasing overall blood flow greatly and decreasing peripheral vascular resistance.

The Tum-Mo study left many questions unanswered, but it showed yet again that yoga can exert profound changes in normal physiological activity – in this case, keeping Tum-Mo yogis warm at temperatures that would typically lead to death by hypothermia.

Deriving from India, China, Nepal and Southeast Asia, yoga practices of various types have gained popularity because they are adaptable to people of all ages and most levels of fitness, and impart significant benefits on both body and mind. These three recently reported studies support the salutary effects of yoga, and clearly show that practice can positively affect health in significant ways.

Source: fox news


Kids who play outdoors are more spiritual and creative: study

playing

Turn off the TV, hide the game consoles and send your kids to play in the great outdoors if you want to raise more thoughtful, fulfilled and spiritual children, suggest the findings of a small study.
Children who spend significant amounts of time playing outside were found to have a stronger sense of purpose, peacefulness and spiritual connection to the earth.

For their study, published in the Journal of the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, researchers from Michigan State University conducted in-depth interviews, drawings, diaries, observation and conversation with parents to measure the children’s esthetic values and sensibilities.

Children who spent five to 10 hours a week playing outside were found to demonstrate strong imaginations, creativity, and curiosity, as well as a deep appreciation for nature’s beauty, whether it be lush green bushes, water patterns or a fascination with bees’ nests, researchers noted.

The 10 children, ages seven and eight, reported feelings of peacefulness and wonderment at natural phenomena like storms, and said they felt happy.
They also expressed a sense of belonging in the world and an acute need to protect the earth.

Though small in scale, the findings underscore the importance of free play for children and its lasting impact: the parents of children who expressed the highest affinity toward nature likewise reported spending significant amounts of time playing outdoors in their childhood.

More than video game graphics and cartoons, researchers theorize that nature’s multisensory diversity — sights, sounds and colors — can help children feel more alive and build self-confidence.

Another study published out of Finland, meanwhile, found gender differences in the way school-aged boys and girls viewed nature: While girls said they appreciated the beauty of flowers and plants, more than 30 percent of boys in the study said they could live without vegetation.

Source: ctv news


Florida woman delivers triplets at 47 without fertility treatment

AR-140509491A woman in Florida named Sharon Lewis recently gave birth to triplets at the age of 47 years old. Forty-seven. With nary a fertility pill or treatment to be seen.

It’s amazing and rare. According to obstetrician Dr. Salih Y. Yasin, getting pregnant is 1 percent, but to be twins it’s probably 1 percent of that. Triplets is 1 percent of 1 percent of that.

Dylan, Denere and Denard each weighed two pounds at birth and were taken care of by the hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit. Lewis developed high blood pressure at some point during her pregnancy, so her doctors decided to deliver the triplets early, at the tender age of thirty weeks.

I often wonder what it would be like if I were to be pregnant again. Eeek. Actually, I don’t wonder–a shiver passes through my spine and I chase it from my mind. I just turned 42–I’m practically ancient. To be totally honest, I can’t imagine doing it all over again at this age. The swollen feet, the heartburn, the lack of sleep, the food cravings, the muscle soreness, the body changing at the speed of light. Not to mention childbirth, breastfeeding, changing diapers. I’ve been through it all and I made it to the other side (six times, to boot), but I just couldn’t do it again.

I know the big trend in Hollywood is to have your babies later on in life but thanks but no thanks. I had my last child when I turned 33 and that was hard enough. My daughter wrecked it all–my stomach, my hair, my lower back and my ability to sneeze without needing a diaper. I think we should just leave it at that.

Source: Baby center


Early Fitness Can Improve the Middle-Age Brain

fitness

The more physically active you are at age 25, the better your thinking tends to be when you reach middle age, according to a large-scale new study. Encouragingly, the findings also suggest that if you negligently neglected to exercise when young, you can start now and still improve the health of your brain.

Those of us past age 40 are generally familiar with those first glimmerings of forgetfulness and muddled thinking. We can’t easily recall people’s names, certain words, or where we left the car keys. “It’s what we scientists call having a C.R.S. problem,” said David R. Jacobs, a professor of public health at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and a co-author of the new study. “You can’t remember stuff.”

But these slight, midlife declines in thinking skills strike some people later or less severely than others, and scientists have not known why. Genetics almost certainly play a role, most researchers agree. Yet the contribution of lifestyle, and in particular of exercise habits, has been unclear.

So recently, Dr. Jacobs and colleagues from universities in the United States and overseas turned to a large trove of data collected over several decades for the Cardia study. The study, whose name is short for Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults, began in the mid-1980s with the recruitment of thousands of men and women then ages 18 to 30 who underwent health testing to determine their cholesterol levels, blood pressure and other measures. Many of the volunteers also completed a treadmill run to exhaustion, during which they strode at an increasingly brisk pace until they could go no farther. The average time to exhaustion among these young adults was 10 minutes, meaning that most were moderately but not tremendously fit.

Twenty-five years later, several thousand of the original volunteers, now ages 43 to 54, were asked to repeat their treadmill run. Most quit much sooner now, with their running times generally lasting seven minutes or less, although a few ran longer in middle age than they had as relative youngsters.

Then, the volunteers completed a battery of cognitive tests intended to measure their memory and executive function, which is the ability to make speedy, accurate judgments and decisions. The volunteers had to remember lists of words and distinguish colors from texts, so that when, for example, the word “yellow” flashed onto a screen in green ink, they would note the color, not the word. (The participants did not undergo similar memory tests in their 20s.)

The results, published last month in Neurology, are both notable and sobering. Those volunteers who had been the most fit as young adults, who had managed to run for more than 10 minutes before quitting, generally performed best on the cognitive tests in middle age. For every additional minute that someone had been able to run as a young adult, he or she could usually remember about one additional word from the lists and make one fewer mistake in distinguishing colors and texts.

That difference in performance, obviously, is slight, but represents about a year’s worth of difference in what most scientists would consider normal brain aging, Dr. Jacobs said. So the 50-year-old who could remember one word more than his age-matched fellows would be presumed to have the brain of a 49-year-old, a bonus that potentially could be magnified later, Dr. Jacobs added. “In other studies, every additional word that someone remembered on the memory test in middle age was associated with nearly a 20 percent decrease in the risk of developing dementia” in old age, he said.

In essence, the findings suggest that the ability to think well in middle age depends to a surprisingly large degree on your lifestyle as a young adult. “It looks like the roots of cognitive decline go back decades,” Dr. Jacobs said.

Which would be a bummer for anyone who spent his or her early adulthood in happy, heedless physical sloth, if the scientists hadn’t also found that those few of their volunteers who had improved their aerobic fitness in the intervening years now performed better on the cognitive tests than those whose fitness had remained about the same or declined. “It’s a cliché, but it really is never too late to start exercising,” Dr. Jacobs said, if you wish to sharpen your thinking skills.

This study did not examine why exercise may increase brainpower. But, Dr. Jacobs said, other studies, including some that have used the same data from the Cardia study, suggest that out-of-shape young people have poor cholesterol profiles and other markers of cardiovascular health that, over time, may contribute to the development of plaques in the blood vessels leading to the brain, eventually impeding blood flow to the brain and impairing its ability to function.

“The lesson is that people need to be moving throughout their lives,” Dr. Jacobs said.

Source: New York Times