630 likes | 756 Views
Color Me Healthy WIC Conference. John Tyler Community College Richmond, VA 10-13-10. Tipping Point: Childhood Obesity From Inception, Conception, and Beyond. John Harrington MD Associate Professor of Pediatrics Eastern Virginia Medical School Director of General Academic Pediatrics
E N D
Color Me HealthyWIC Conference John Tyler Community College Richmond, VA 10-13-10
Tipping Point: Childhood Obesity From Inception, Conception, and Beyond John Harrington MD Associate Professor of Pediatrics Eastern Virginia Medical School Director of General Academic Pediatrics Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters
Objectives • Obesity risks before, during, and soon after pregnancy • Tipping Point Study • Breast versus Bottle • Self Regulation of Oral Feeding • Guidelines for Feeding, Sleeping and Exercise • Environment and Advocating • Conclusions
Mom and Dad • Mom’s pre-pregnancy BMI is correlated with child’s BMI at age 3. • Dad’s BMI is less correlated in most studies • Maternal history of Diabetes increases risk of ↑ BMI • Maternal history of smoking associated with obesity in child at age 5
Couple’s risk • Overweight/Obese female likely to marry or procreate with Overweight/obese male • Recent study shows overweight/obese girls more likely to start having sex earlier and to get pregnant. • Eating habits inherited, but can be modified by geography (American couple in East Asia)
Obesity in pregnancy • If women gains > than 30-35 pounds for pregnancy 48% more likely to have obese child by age 7. • Japanese OB 8-12 kg limit weight gain • If mom obese baby likely to have some insulin resistance, especially if LGA or SGA • Heritability of BMI between 40-70% • Pre-gestational and gestational DM=increased risk for child obesity
After birth • Babies who are SGA have impaired beta-cell activity in response to glucose tolerance test. • SGA prone to truncal fat deposition and metabolic syndrome • LGA also at increased risk for abnl weight increase • Rapid weight gain in infancy correlates with obesity.
Study at EVMS • Identifying the “Tipping Point” Age for Overweight Pediatric Patients • John W. Harrington MD,Vu Q. Nguyen, James F. Paulson PhD,Ruth Garland, Lawrence, Pasquinelli MD, Donald Lewis MD • Over 250 charts reviewed in 2 practices of children who were overweight or obese.
Findings • Over half the children in study became overweight before age 2. • All patients were obese or overweight by age 10 • The rate of gain is approximately 1 excess BMI unit/year, therefore causing most children to be overweight by age 2. • Critical period for preventing childhood obesity in this subset of identified patients is during the first 2 years of life and for many by 3 months of age.
Intervention for obesity will have to be earlier!!!! But what can we do?
The Rapidly Gaining Infant • 2 %iles crossed should raise a red flag ■ ■ ■
Do Fat Babies Grow Faster? • Parents always say he is hungry and growing (The Buddha Baby) • Overweight/Obese infants and children will grow faster due to growth hormone overload. • The problem is their overall height will be unchanged. They just grow faster earlier.
Breast vs Bottle and Obesity • Breast feeding is protective- probably due to the infants ability to “self-regulate” • Longer breast feeding more protection up until 1 year. • This is an inverse proportion • ↑ in time breastfeeding, ↓ BMI • Bottle feeding increased risk for obesity • ↑ protein in formula may stimulate insulin
Warning signs for overfeeding • Rapid weight gain in infant (crossing 2 %iles upward from 25 to 75%) • Weight outpacing height • Parent shows skills of feeding while not watching infant- missing satiety cues • Bottle propping
Bottle fed • Must watch for infant cues of being full • Head turning • Regurgitant • Paced feeding • Tongue thrust • Drool feeding
Making the diagnosis in infants • Obese infants in large practice in Texas 16% • Obese child at 6 months 20X more likely to be obese at 24 months • Only 10% of infants at 24 months who were obese were diagnosed as that in practice
Can Intervention Work? • Study done by one solo pediatrician in NY • Followed 100 infant pairs to age 2 • One group taught to self-regulate intake by 15 months. Other group did not, parent fed. • Self-regulating group only one BMI > 85% • 42% of non-regulated group with BMI> 85% • This difference continued even after attempts to crossover groups
Feeding is hard-wired to take in the amount of calories you need. Strong Satiety Signal
And No TV !!! At least limited
Solid foods • Later introduction of solids after 6 months shows correlation with lower BMI • Self regulation as early as possible • Let the infant/toddler feed themselves by 11-12 months
Sleep • Regular and consistent bedtime routine • Infant who sleeps > 12 hours has less risk of obesity. This was a negative linear relationship. • Less sleep more obesity • Greater affect on boys versus girls
Three important household routines • Eating an evening meal as a family • Getting 8-10 hours of sleep at night • Limited TV/Screen time • 40% lower obesity
BMI increase risk • Subtle neglect • Inadequate supervision • Poor social engagement • Ethnicity • African American • Hispanic • American Indian
What we need (0-5 years) • More physical activity, less screen time • Need to actually move! • Need safe parks, playgrounds, and recreational facilities. • Daycares need to be promoting activity and movement • Less energy dense foods and sugar in diet • Walking school buses