Bosnian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
International Urology and Nephrology 2007

Pediatric nephrology patients are overweight: 20 years' experience in a single Canadian tertiary pediatric nephrology clinic.

Samo registrirani korisnici mogu prevoditi članke
Prijavite se / prijavite se
Veza se sprema u međuspremnik
Guido Filler
Sílvia Mansur Reimão
Anusha Kathiravelu
Joanne Grimmer
Janusz Feber
Alfred Drukker

Ključne riječi

Sažetak

BACKGROUND

Obesity is an independent risk factor for chronic kidney disease (CKD). We compared the body composition of pediatric nephrology patients with that of the general child population over 2 decades.

METHODS

About 4,959 patients above 2 years of age (mean: 9.6 +/- 4.5) were referred to a tertiary pediatric nephrology clinic from 1985 to 2006. In 3,422 patients (69.0% with the same mean age) there were sufficient data to analyze body composition, expressed as body mass index (BMI) Z-score and calculated on the basis of normal data taken from the National (USA) Center for Health Statistics (2000).

RESULTS

Hematuria (21.68%), recurrent urinary tract infections (16.09%), proteinuria (13.95%) and hypertension (8.27%) were the most common referral diagnoses. Mean BMI Z-score of the pediatric nephrology patients increased significantly from 0.29 +/- 1.07 during the years 1985-1991 to 0.44 +/- 1.27 in 1992-1999 and 0.87 +/- 1.70 in 2000-2006 (P < 0.0001, ANOVA). Whereas the rate of the increase in BMI Z-score was not statistically different from that seen in the normal population, the young nephrology patients had over the entire time consistently significantly higher BMI Z-scores (average +0.72) than the comparable normal USA data. Several disease groups with potential for development of CKD had higher BMI Z-scores than found in the age- and sex-adjusted control data.

CONCLUSIONS

The increased rate of obesity in our studied population suggests that pediatric nephrology patients are at even greater risk for developing CKD later in life than could be predicted from their renal disease only. We recommend therapeutic intervention to address this potentially modifiable risk factor.

Pridružite se našoj
facebook stranici

Najkompletnija baza ljekovitog bilja potpomognuta naukom

  • Radi na 55 jezika
  • Biljni lijekovi potpomognuti naukom
  • Prepoznavanje biljaka po slici
  • Interaktivna GPS karta - označite bilje na lokaciji (uskoro)
  • Pročitajte naučne publikacije povezane sa vašom pretragom
  • Pretražite ljekovito bilje po učincima
  • Organizirajte svoja interesovanja i budite u toku sa istraživanjem vijesti, kliničkim ispitivanjima i patentima

Upišite simptom ili bolest i pročitajte o biljkama koje bi mogle pomoći, unesite travu i pogledajte bolesti i simptome protiv kojih se koristi.
* Sve informacije temelje se na objavljenim naučnim istraživanjima

Google Play badgeApp Store badge