AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity affects about 20% of children and is linked to a higher risk of heart disease and early death, prompting a study using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to assess heart changes in obese kids.
  • The study involved 41 obese/overweight children and 29 healthy children, revealing that obese kids had significantly larger left ventricular (LV) mass and thicker myocardium, with cardiac changes observable as early as age 8.
  • Findings indicated that 24% of obese children had concentric hypertrophy, with this group showing the greatest impairment in heart function, suggesting they may be at higher risk and need closer monitoring.

Article Abstract

Background: Obesity affects nearly one in five children and is associated with increased risk of premature death. Obesity-related heart disease contributes to premature death. We aimed to use cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to comprehensively characterize the changes in cardiac geometry and function in obese children.

Methods And Results: Forty-one obese/overweight (age 12 ± 3 years, 56 % female) and 29 healthy weight children (age 14 ± 3 years, 41 % female) underwent CMR, including both standard cine imaging and displacement encoded imaging, for a complete assessment of left ventricular (LV) structure and function. After adjusting for age, LV mass index was 23 % greater (27 ± 4 g/m(2.7) vs 22 ± 3 g/m(2.7), p <0.001) and the LV myocardium was 10 % thicker (5.6 ± 0.8 mm vs 5.1 ± 0.8 mm, p <0.001) in the obese/overweight children. This evidence of cardiac remodeling was present in obese children as young as age 8. Twenty four percent of obese/overweight children had concentric hypertrophy, 59 % had normal geometry and 17 % had either eccentric hypertrophy or concentric remodeling. LV mass index, thickness, ejection fraction and peak longitudinal and circumferential strains all correlated with epicardial adipose tissue after adjusting for height and gender (all p <0.05). Peak longitudinal and circumferential strains showed a significant relationship with the type of LV remodeling, and were most impaired in children with concentric hypertrophy (p <0.001 and p = 0.003, respectively).

Conclusions: Obese children show evidence of significant cardiac remodeling and dysfunction, which begins as young as age 8. Obese children with concentric hypertrophy and impaired strain may represent a particularly high risk subgroup that demands further investigation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4863365PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-016-0247-0DOI Listing

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