Heavy teens have higher risk of early death (Reuters) Updated: 2006-07-18 15:24
NEW YORK - The heavier a woman is at the age of 18, the greater is her risk
of dying prematurely, according to a large study published Monday.
Harvard researchers found that of the more than 100,000 U.S. women, who
were overweight or obese at age 18, faced a higher risk of early death from
heart disease, cancer, suicide and other causes 12 years later.
Women
who were overweight at 18 were 66 percent more likely to die prematurely than
those who were thin, while obesity at age 18 nearly tripled the risk of dying in
young by middle-age.
Researchers from the Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston report the findings in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Although overweight and obese teens are likely to remain so as adults,
adulthood weight did not completely explain the link between teenage weight and
premature death, said principal study author Dr. Frank B. Hu.
This
suggests that childhood obesity itself has lasting health effects, he told
Reuters Health, and it's not clear whether weight loss later in life erases the
damage.
"Losing weight can certainly reduce the risks," Hu said, "but
whether it completely eliminates them is unclear."
He said the findings
underscore the importance of preventing excessive weight gain in the first
place. "This is further evidence that childhood obesity is a major public health
problem," Hu said.
The findings come from the long-running Nurses'
Health Study II, which began following 116,671 female nurses in 1989, when the
women were between 24 and 44 years of age.
Participants completed
detailed health questionnaires at the study's start and at regular intervals
thereafter. The first survey asked them to estimate their weight at age 18.
Over the next 12 years, 710 women died, with an increase in risk
climbing in tandem with weight at age 18. Compared with women who were
normal-weight at 18, those who were overweight were more than three times as
likely to die prematurely of heart disease or stroke and 40 percent more likely
to die of cancer.
They were also about twice as likely to commit
suicide.
These weight-related risks remained when the researchers
factored in lifestyle habits like smoking, exercise and alcohol use.
It's possible, according to Hu's team, that excess body fat in
adolescence has specific and lasting effects on the metabolic or cardiovascular
systems that contribute to premature death.
Whatever the reason for the
link, the researchers say, the findings once again highlight the need for
obesity prevention early in life. Health consequences often do not take years to
emerge, Hu noted, as heavy children can develop serious problems like type 2
diabetes and high blood pressure.
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