Childhood Weight and Adult Blood Pressure: A Long-Term Connection Unveiled

Childhood Weight and Adult Blood Pressure: A Long-Term Connection Unveiled

Childhood Weight and Adult Blood Pressure: A Long-Term Connection Unveiled

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A potential early warning sign of high blood pressure in adulthood has been shown to have its roots in young age. Studies show that excess weight during adolescence and childhood can significantly increase the likelihood of developing high blood pressure in middle age.

Doctoral student Lina Lilja at the University of Gothenburg and Swedish scientists have discovered a linear relationship between the two, showing the damaging effects of childhood obesity on adult health. This comes amid World Health Organization estimates that almost 1.3 billion adults aged 30 to 79 worldwide experience high blood pressure, which increases their likelihood of suffering strokes, heart attacks, and kidney disease.

A Clear Pattern Emerges

The groundbreaking analysis examined almost 1,700 individuals born between 1948 and 1968, evaluating their body mass index (BMI)  from ages 7 to 8t, and then from 18 to 20. These figures were then compared with later blood pressure readings between 50 and 64.

The findings have unearthed a clear pattern: A one-unit rise in BMI in childhood corresponds to a marked increase in diastolic and systolic blood pressure in males through middle age. Women, while also undergoing puberty, showed no such link between pre-pubertal BMI and later blood pressure issues.

Dr Jenny Kindblom from Sahlgrenska University Hospital discusses the importance of these findings, noting that even slight rises in blood pressure over a prolonged time can bring about havoc within the vascular system and can even trigger chronic heart and kidney ailments. The findings indicate the build-up of extra fat in the formative years might start a cascade of low-level inflammation and vascular complications, which result in hypertension as we grow older.

Health promotion programs and lifestyle interventions targeting obese and overweight children and adolescents might make it possible to manage the mounting burden of hypertension-associated illnesses. As Lilja explains, early intervention could prevent generations from suffering life-threatening high blood pressure.

These revelations are being made public at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice in May and can give a new outlook on the importance of controlling weight from a young age. While results continue to be awaiting peer-reviewed publication validation, they already provide a roadmap for the prevention of hypertension and related diseases that could transform public health practice.

Source:

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1039514