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    Doctors: Test all kids for cholesterol by age 11

    CHICAGO (AP) — Every child should be tested for high cholesterol as early as age 9 — surprising new advice from a government panel that suggests screening kids in grade school for a problem more common in middle age.

    The idea will come as a shock to most parents. And it's certain to stir debate.

    The doctors on the expert panel that announced the new guidelines Friday concede there is little proof that testing now will prevent heart attacks decades later. But many doctors say waiting might be too late for children who have hidden risks.

    Fat deposits form in the heart arteries in childhood but don't usually harden them and cause symptoms until later in life. The panel urges cholesterol screening between ages 9 and 11 — before puberty, when cholesterol temporarily dips — and again between ages 17 and 21.

    The panel also suggests diabetes screening every two years starting as early as 9 for children who are overweight and have other risks for Type 2 diabetes, including family history.

    The new guidelines are from an expert panel appointed by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

    Some facts everyone agrees on:

    — By the fourth grade, 10 to 13 percent of U.S. children have high cholesterol, defined as a score of 200 or more.

    — Half of children with high cholesterol will also have it as adults, raising their risk of heart disease.

    — One third of U.S. children and teens are obese or overweight, which makes high cholesterol and diabetes more likely.

    Until now, cholesterol testing has only been done for kids with a known family history of early heart disease or inherited high cholesterol, or with risk factors such as obesity, diabetes or high blood pressure. That approach misses about 30 percent of kids with high cholesterol.

    "If we screen at age 20, it may be already too late," said one of the guideline panel members, Dr. Elaine Urbina, director of preventive cardiology at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. "To me, it's not controversial at all. We should have been doing this for years."

    Elizabeth Duruz didn't want to take that chance. Her 10-year-old daughter, Joscelyn Benninghoff, has been on cholesterol-lowering medicines since she was 5 because high cholesterol runs in her family. They live in Cincinnati.

    "We decided when she was 5 that we would get her screened early on. She tested really high" despite being active and not overweight, Duruz said. "We're doing what we need to do for her now, and that gives me hope that she'll be healthy."

    Dr. Roger Blumenthal, who is preventive cardiology chief at Johns Hopkins Medical Center and had no role in the guidelines, said he thinks his 12-year-old son should be tested because he has a cousin with very high "bad" cholesterol who needed heart bypass surgery for clogged arteries in his 40s.

    "I'm very supportive" of universal screening, he said. "The knowledge of their cholesterol numbers as well as their blood sugar levels can be very helpful for the physicians and their families about which patients are headed toward diabetes."

    Dr. William Cooper, a pediatrics and preventive medicine professor at Vanderbilt University, said expanding the testing guidelines "would seem to me to make sense."

    But he added: "One of the risks would be that we would be treating more kids, potentially, and we don't know yet the implications of what we're treating. Are we treating a number or are we treating a risk factor?"

    That's the reason a different group of government advisers, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, concluded in 2007 that not enough is known about the possible benefits and risks to recommend for or against cholesterol screening for children and teens.

    One of its leaders, Dr. Michael LeFevre, a family medicine specialist at the University of Missouri, said that for the task force to declare screening beneficial there must be evidence that treatment improves health, such as preventing heart attacks, rather than just nudging down a number — the cholesterol score.

    "Some of the argument is that we need to treat children when they're 14 or 15 to keep them from having a heart attack when they're 50, and that's a pretty long lag time," he said.

    The guidelines say that cholesterol drugs likely would be recommended for less than 1 percent of kids tested, and they shouldn't be used in children younger than 10 unless they have severe problems.

    "We'll also continue to encourage parents and children to make positive lifestyle choices to prevent risk factors from occurring," steps such as diet and exercise, said Dr. Gordan Tomaselli, president of the American Heart Association. The group praised the guidelines and will host a presentation on them Sunday at its annual conference in Florida.

    Cholesterol tests cost around $80 and usually are covered by health insurance. Several of the 14 doctors on the guidelines panel have received consulting fees or have had other financial ties to makers of cholesterol medicines.

    Typically, cholesterol drugs are used indefinitely but they are generally safe, said Dr. Sarah Blumenschein, director of preventive cardiology at Children's Medical Center in Dallas, who had no role in the guidelines but supports them.

    "You have to start early. It's much easier to change children's behavior when they're 5 or 10 or 12" than when they're older, she said.

    The guidelines also say doctors should:

    — Take yearly blood pressure measurements for children starting at age 3.

    — Start routine anti-smoking advice when kids are ages 5 to 9, and counsel parents of infants not to smoke in the home.

    — Review infants' family history of obesity and start tracking body mass index, or BMI, a measure of obesity, at age 2.

    The panel also suggests using more frank terms for kids who are overweight and obese than some government agencies have used in the past. Children whose BMI is in the 85th to 95th percentile should be called overweight, not "at risk for overweight," and kids whose BMI is in the 95th percentile or higher should be called obese, not "overweight — even kids as young as age 2, the panel said.

    "Some might feel that 'obese' is an unacceptable term for children and parents," so doctors should "use descriptive terminology that is appropriate for each child and family," the guidelines recommend.

    They were released online Friday by the journal Pediatrics.

    ___

    Marchione reported from Milwaukee and can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

    ___

    Online:

    Guidelines: http://tinyurl.com/7csojas

    NHLBI panel: http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/cvd_ped/index.htm

    Cholesterol info: http://tinyurl.com/23dtxvo

    and http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/heart/index.htm(hash)chol

     
    • Ted Teddy  •  6 mths ago
      The headline should read "Doctors find that screening kids every 2 years remarkably increases their income"
      • IndigoWolverine 6 mths ago
        There ya go! Yeah sometimes its hard to listen to doctors when theyre getting paid for this:P
    • ALVIN H  •  Houston, United States  •  6 mths ago
      These statins messed up my muscles, can't imagine, parents taking that chance with their kids, because it happens a lot.
      • snoops 6 mths ago
        how ?
      • WYZ1 6 mths ago
        Snoops...a large percentage of people have muscular problems after taking statins. Doctors don't tell us how it happens. They just switch us to another brand.
      • KENT 6 mths ago
        Only 3% have problems with taking statins. This is not a large percentage.
    • ****  •  San Francisco, United States  •  6 mths ago
      all nuts. now they found a new market for their poisons.
      • Kara Saentibaybay 6 mths ago
        You said it right there, dude.

        "A new market for their poisons."

        They just couldn't get enough.
      • truth teller 6 mths ago
        Agreed. I have not seen a doctor since i was a kid, I'm 48 now. Don't go, won't go, I have the land to heal me, and it does a great job of it, without charging me my house and land, or my left nut. And even better, it isn't trying to cut me open all the time. This whole thing is for nothing more than money. That's it, period. But you are all too weak to take back our country, so soon we won't have it, and you will be forced to do as told, when told, how told, without exception. And you know what, you all deserve it as well.
    • !  •  6 mths ago
      My health problems were minimal until I foolishly followed a doctors advice. Now, my liver enzymes are elevated, I'm 30 lbs heavier, and I'm apparently at an increased risk for heart conditions....all thanks to a pharmaceutical. DON'T put your kids through unnecessary testing and possibly harmful treatments. You know if your kid has more than "baby fat" that would indicate that there could be some underlying health problems. Act accordingly...which means putting effort into improving their diet, not putting them at the mercy of a physician who could be getting Big Pharma kickbacks for prescriptions.
      • Pazuzu 6 mths ago
        Of course statins dohave the potential to harm your liver. Dr.'s are litlle robots that in many ways are without thought and propetual motion machines. they just continue on the same course regardless of how tech and evidence changes.
        See above explanation. Do stop taking whatever they are prescribing and either change drug are do without. there is a genetic reason for this.
      • KENT 6 mths ago
        The article clearly stated that the emphasis would be on diet and lifestyle changes, not on the use of statins. This is no different than with adults with high choloresterol. Statins are only used when other measures don't work. They are not advocating statins as the first course of treatment.
      • farmerwife 6 mths ago
        Right ... that's what they SAY. I don't see any skinny diabetics among my friends with Type II Diabetes so evidently the warnings about weight don't work.
    • Burdenx4  •  Phoenix, United States  •  6 mths ago
      high cholesterol is not the evil culprit everyone would like you to belive it is. lots of people have heart attacks and such without having high cholesterol.....
      • dolores 6 mths ago
        I agree. I'm not convinced that 'bad' cholesterol is necessarily bad.
      • Robert 6 mths ago
        there needs to be even more studies about cholesterol before we can conclude this is the path we want to go. I am all for testing kids at an early age and ensuring they are healthy but I don't advocate use of medicines in young kids unless the situation demands it
    • Brad Spitt  •  6 mths ago
      Yep, gotta sell more pharmaceuticals! Can't miss out with the 11 yr old market, can we ?
    • Jan  •  6 mths ago
      And what drug company brought this government panel together? Just like a lot of other people I'm so tired of my government, my representatives being bought and paid for. It has almost brought us down, and the country cannot go on with the likes of this happening right in our faces. It's the biggest point that I agree with the occupiers, and I really don't agree with their tactics. How are we gonna take our government back away from all these crooks? Now they want to put our children out there to ruin their health for their profits. Greedy pond #$%$.. The longer in life you can NOT take drugs the healthier you will be, I believe that!
    • Salt Fish  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  6 mths ago
      This is crazy. The medical profession and drug industry want everyone taking meds. Just stop eating so much and exercise. Geeez!
    • Kenneth  •  Greenville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Sounds like the makers of cholesterol meds want a generation of lifetime customers...
    • Oceania  •  6 mths ago
      Several of the 14 doctors on the guidelines panel have received consulting fees or have had other financial ties to makers of cholesterol medicines.
      Says it all doesn't it!
    • David  •  6 mths ago
      Interesting that they mention to do screening but didn't even mention the real issue... nutrition and health. Kids start eating healthy and not sit in front of the TV / computer 24/7 and this problem will resolve itself.
    • B  •  6 mths ago
      SERIOUSLY?........whos paying for this study do you think? it will come to the place where they will have every person on earth hooked on some kind of drug.....
    • Observer  •  6 mths ago
      There is another line of thought that cholesterol is really not the problem. About 50% of those who have heart attacks have normal or low cholesterol. In the arteries cholesterol is the healing agent for repairing damage. Prevent the damage and you prevent the deposits in the wall of the arteries. There is thought that fats and oils in our diet damage the walls of the arteries causing cholesterol to attempt to fix this damage. I think I would rather seek to prevent the damage than subject my children to taking statin drugs so early in life. My favorite line in the medical world is, "We now think..." Is there a track record for starting children on statins and having them take these drugs for 50 years? Perhaps something as simple as a plant-based diet would prevent the problems.
    • UnderSerf  •  6 mths ago
      Why, so the insurance corporations can deny these children coverage as adults for having "pre-exisiting conditions"?
    • GA  •  6 mths ago
      Everyone needs to read "Letters to my Patients" and "More Letters to my Patients". Ever noticed with every ad of cholestorol medicine, that they say take their pill and a healthy diet and exercise. The key to being healthy is exercise, a healthy diet, and vitamins. Not cholesterol medicine
    • David  •  6 mths ago
      Wow! Great news!!! (for the pharmaceutical companies) This must be a dream come true for them! If your kid has high LDL then find out WHY! Do not just throw pills at them!
    • colliefan  •  Raleigh, United States  •  6 mths ago
      soon they will screen infants for depression
    • carolyn  •  Toronto, Canada  •  6 mths ago
      Read "Over Diagnosed. Making People Sick in the Pursuit of Health". The book talks of this exact phenomena - looking extra hard for problems and treatment for the smallest of conditions that may not ever cause a problem. And find out who backs these "expert panels". Often drug companies have a big stake in these panels so they can ensure the criteria for prescribing their drugs changes.
    • Midwest  •  Arlington, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Looks like the pharmaceutical companies are targeting children for profits again.
    • Jen  •  6 mths ago
      Yeah, let's just pump our kids full of MORE medicine! One word...... RIDICULOUS!!!
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