Publications by authors named "Berenson G"

Electrolyte and mineral intakes assessed by 24-hour dietary recall were examined for race and sex differences in cohorts of infants and school-age children at 6 months and at 1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 13, 15, and 17 years. A fourfold increase in sodium intake occurred from 6 months to 4 years, and potassium intake doubled. Sodium increased from 0.

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Although the selective interaction of low density lipoproteins (LDL) with arterial proteoglycans is known, information is lacking on LDL-binding affinity of different subspecies occurring within a proteoglycan family. Isomeric chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan preparations sedimenting at densities of 1.54 g/ml (D1), 1.

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To investigate caffeine intake patterns in children, dietary intakes were examined for a biracial sample of 1,284 infants and children. Twenty-four-hour dietary recalls were completed by parents of children aged 6 months and repeated at ages 1, 2, 3, and 4 years; children 10 years old served as their own respondents and were surveyed at ages 13, 15, and 17 years. The sample was 60% white and 40% black.

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Although white adults have more extensive aortic surface involvement with fibrous plaques than do blacks, adolescent blacks have more aortic fatty streaks (FS) than do whites of similar ages. Possible determinants of these racial differences in aortic surface involvement with FS were therefore examined in 44 decedents who had previously been examined as part of the Bogalusa Heart Study. Ages at death ranged from 6 to 27 years (mean, 18 years); the median interval between the last risk factor examination and death was 3.

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Relationships between diet and cardiovascular disease risk factors were studied in a cohort of infants in Bogalusa, Louisiana. The 24-hour dietary recalls and cardiovascular measurements were obtained on each child at age 6 months, yearly through age 4, and again at age 7 (cardiovascular measurements only). At ages 4 and 7, children with persistently high intakes of dietary cholesterol (three or more measurements in the upper tertile) had levels of serum total cholesterol approximately 14 mg/dl higher than children whose intakes of cholesterol were not persistently high.

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Fasting serum lipids, lipoprotein cholesterol, and other cardiovascular disease risk factors were examined in 321 natural parents of children with low and/or high levels of beta- and pre-beta-lipoprotein cholesterol. Parents of children from low pre-beta-lipoprotein groups had elevated alpha- and lower pre-beta-lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Parents whose children had high beta-lipoprotein cholesterol levels also had high serum total and beta-lipoprotein cholesterol levels.

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The synthesis of proteoglycans by aorta explants from rabbits with diet-induced atherosclerosis and controls was studied by 35S-incorporation. Proteoglycans were isolated under dissociative conditions from incubation medium and from arterial explants. Additionally, the tissue proteoglycans that were not extracted by 4 M guanidine-HCl were solubilized by digestion of the tissue by elastase in the presence of proteinase inhibitors.

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The influence of partial replacement of starch by sucrose on dietary cholesterol-induced serum lipoprotein responses was examined in 10 male cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). In a crossover design two semipurified diets provided either starch or starch and sucrose (1:1) as carbohydrate (49% by calories) with 0.4 mg cholesterol/kcal.

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Diets of four groups of 10-year-old children (no. = 871, 30% black, 70% white) were examined over 10 years with 24-hour dietary recalls to study temporal trends in cholesterol, fat, and fatty acid intakes in a community. Boys had higher intakes per day and per kilogram body weight than girls for all nutrients (p less than .

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The importance of health promotion is recognized throughout the nation. The Surgeon General's report of 1980, Promoting Health/Preventing Disease, delineates objectives for intervention in 15 health priority areas. Approximately one-third of the objectives relate directly to the health of children, and many are addressed by a comprehensive cardiovascular (CV) health promotion program for elementary school children--Heart Smart.

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Secular changes in height and weight measurements were examined in five- to 14-year-olds from 1973 to 1984. The age-sex specific 85th percentile was used to classify persons as overweight (based on ponderal index; kg/m3). Secular increases in weight (2.

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Alcohol and tobacco usage patterns were assessed in 1,811 children and young adults, 12-24 years of age. The prevalence of cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption increased with age in all race and sex groups. Smokeless tobacco use (chewing tobacco and snuff) was primarily seen in white males with the highest prevalence rates in 12-15 year olds.

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Clinical and anatomical observations from the Bogalusa Heart Study over a 15-year span provide data on cardiovascular risk factors and the early natural history of arteriosclerosis. These studies established that: cardiovascular risk can be predicted in early life; interrelationships of risk factors in children are similar to those observed in adults; and concentrations of serum lipoproteins change during sexual maturation. Strategies involving the general population and high-risk groups should be considered to help reduce atherosclerosis and coronary artery disease.

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Proteoglycans from human atherosclerotic lesions and from uninvolved aortic intima were isolated and their composition was studied. The tissues were sequentially extracted by guanidine hydrochloride followed by hydrolysis of the tissue by elastase. Chondroitin sulfate/dermatan sulfate proteoglycans were predominant in guanidine hydrochloride extracts of the tissue.

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The Heart Smart Family Health Promotion identified elementary-school-age children with elevated blood pressure (BP), based on sex-, race-, height-specific 90th percentiles, and ponderal index (wt/ht3), based on sex-, race-, and age-specific 90th percentiles (norms developed in the Bogalusa Heart Study). These children and their parents were recruited into a behavioral program aimed at reducing cardiovascular (CV) risk factors for both children and parents and preventing "tracking" of children's elevated risk factors into adulthood. Cardiovascular screening consisted of BP, anthropometric evaluation, serum lipids, and 24-hour urinalysis.

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Cardiovascular risk factors in childhood are related to arterial wall changes that lead to atherosclerotic coronary artery disease in later life. Atherosclerosis begins early in life. The observations of early arterial wall connective tissue changes and accompanying early lipid deposition show the importance of understanding cardiovascular risk factors in children.

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Parent-child associations of height, weight, subscapular skinfold thickness, blood pressure, and serum lipids and lipoproteins were observed in a cohort of 440 infants and their parents in Bogalusa, LA. The infants were examined according to a standardized protocol six times from birth to 7 years of age, and the parents were examined when the child was 2 years old. Regression analyses were performed with the value of the cardiovascular risk factor variable for the child as the dependent variable and race, sex of child, and either mother's value, father's value, or both mother's and father's values as the independent variables.

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Dietary patterns and racial differences in nutrient intake were observed in children 6 months to 4 years of age in the Bogalusa Heart Study. Even in this sample of young children, the composition of the intakes of the majority of children was not compatible with prudent recommendations of less than 35% and 10% of energy from total and saturated fat, respectively. Mean cholesterol intake of the 4-year-old children (390 mg) was approximately one half of the average daily adult levels.

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BP was measured in 440 children followed longitudinally from birth to 7 years of age in Bogalusa, LA. Levels, trends, and determinants of BP were evaluated in this newborn cohort. Both systolic and diastolic BP levels remained relatively constant between the ages of 6 months and 7 years.

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Height, weight, and skinfold measurements were obtained on a cohort of 447 children from birth (weight) or 6 months of age (height and skinfold) and monitored yearly thereafter until 7 years of age. At age 7 years, 250 remained for follow-up screening. A significant degree of tracking was found for all variables from age 1 to age 7 years.

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Cardiovascular risk factor variables were examined in a cohort of 440 infants from birth through 7 years of age. Anthropometric measures, BP, serum lipid and lipoprotein values, and dietary intake data were obtained according to detailed protocols. Various quality controls to ensure the collection of valid and reliable data were instituted.

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Serum lipids and lipoprotein cholesterol fractions were examined in a newborn cohort that was followed from birth to 7 years of age. Although white and female infants had higher cord blood levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) than did black and male infants, respectively, these differences did not persist throughout early childhood. Mean levels of all serum lipids and lipoproteins increased greatly in the first 6 months of life, and by 2 years of age, levels approached those seen in adolescents.

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