CHILDHOOD OBESITY: The Global Epidemic
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Transcript CHILDHOOD OBESITY: The Global Epidemic
APPROACH TO AN ADOLESCENT WITH
OBESITY
By: Camille-Marie A. Go
Objectives
To present a case of a child with obesity
To discuss the burden of disease,
pathophysiology, management and possible
complications of obesity
Our Patient
P.N.
14 year old
Male
Filipino
Roman Catholic
San Mateo, Rizal
Chief complaint
Rapid weight
gain and
hyperglycemia
3 years PTC
1 year PTC
•Annual Physical Examination
•FBS (2.98 mmol/L) ; cholesterol (360 mg/dl)
•Low fat diet
•rapid weight gain + dark pigmentation of
skin creases and flexural areas
•FBS (5.78 mmol/L), SGPT 109 U/L,
cholesterol (240 mg/dl)
•Given Polyenylphosphatidylcholine
(Essentiale)
2 months
PTC
1 week PTC
•elevated fasting blood sugar, elevated
cholesterol, and elevated liver
transaminases
•Polyenylphosphatidylcholine (Essentiale) +
strict low fat and low cholesterol diet
•Persistence of weight gain
•Fasting Blood Sugar, transaminases,
cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL and HbA1c
•Referral to Pediatric Endocrinologist
Review of Systems
General: (-) weight loss, (+) voracious appetite
Cutaneous: (-) rashes, (-) discoloration, (-) jaundice
HEENT: (-) blurring of vision, (-) nasoaural discharge,
(-) epistaxis, (-) gum bleeding
Cardiovascular: (-) cyanosis, (-) chest pain, (-) orthopnea,
(-) easy fatigability (-) palpitation
Respiratory: (-) cough, (-) colds, (-) difficulty of breathing,
(-) sneezing
Gastrointestinal: (-) vomiting (-) abdominal pain, (-) diarrhea,
(-) constipation, bowel movement once a day
Review of Systems
GUT: yellow urine, (-) edema of the hands and feet, (-) frothy
urine
Metabolic: (-) polydipsia, (-) polyuria
Extremities: (-) swelling, (-) joint swelling, (-) limitation in
movement
Nervous/Behavioural: (-) headache, (-) dizziness, (-) nausea, (-)
tremors, (-) convulsions , (-) change in sensorium (-) behavioral
change
Hematopoietic: (-) pallor, (-) easy bruisability (-) prolonged
bleeding
Family History
(+) DM – both parents;
maternal GM
(+) HPN - maternal GM
(+) obesity - father
(-) PTB
(-) Heart disease
(-) Thyroid disorders
(-) Blood dyscrasia
(-) Mental retardation,
(-) Seizure
Immunization History
BCG
3 doses of Hepatitis B
DPT x 3
OPV x 3
Measles
MMR
Boosters: of BCG and MMR
No untoward reactions
Birth and Maternal History
Born to a 30 year old G2P1 (1001) nonsmoker nonalcoholic
mother
Prenatal check up since 1 month AOG;
(+) MVS, Feso4
(+) GDM at 6 months AOG, advised diet modification; repeat
exam after 1 month normal
Delivered Full term via NSD assisted by OB; (+) good cry and
activity
(+) small for gestational age
Newborn Screening and Hearing Screening not done;
Nutritional History
Breastfed until two months old
Milk formula thereafter
Complementary feeding at 6 months
High carbohydrate and high fat diet prepared by the mother
Fastfood 2x – 3x weekly
Fond of junk foods and chocolates
Food
Food
CHO (g)
CHON (g)
Fats (g)
Kcal
Breakfast
3 pcs hotdog
4 cups of rice
Water
18g
184g
24g
16g
258 kcal
800 kcal
Snacks
6 pcs Biscuits
Orange juice
23g
10g
Lunch
2 cups Pork
Sinigang
vegetables
3 cups of rice
6g
138g
Snacks
6 pcs Biscuits
Orange juice
23g
10g
Dinner
3 cups
Chicken
Adobo
4 cups of rice
water
184g
2g
32g
2g
12g
100kcal
40 kcal
24g
2g
32 g
16g
344kcal
32 kcal
600 kcal
100kcal
40 kcal
24 g
344 kcal
800 kcal
Total ACI 3,458 kcal
RENI 2,800 kcal
% intake
123.5%
Psychosocial History
Home:
Concrete house with 6 household members
Nuclear patriarchal clan
Education:
Second year high school at school in San Mateo, Rizal
Favorite subject: Math
Average grade - 89%.
Aspires to be a successful accountant when he grows up
Psychosocial History
Activity:
Fond of computer games
Spends 4 to 6 hours per day
Most of activities are sedentary
Drugs:
No intake of alcoholic beverage or cigarette use
Does not know anyone using prohibited drugs
Sexual:
Has female crushes among his schoolmates
No girlfriend. He has not courted any girl.
Psychosocial History
Suicide:
No personal history of attempted suicide
Sees himself as overweight, not happy or proud of it
Safety:
Walks on the sidewalk to school
Does not ride in cars with drivers who are intoxicated
Spirituality:
Hears mass every Sunday together with his whole family
Actively participates in church activities
Past Medical History
No previous history of hospitalization, or transfusions,
or allergies
No history of communicable diseases (measles,
varicella)
Underwent Circumcision at 10 years of age
Physical Examination:
Conscious, coherent, oriented to 3 spheres, not in
cardiorespiratory distress, ambulatory, over-nourished, wellhydrated, well-looking
Wt: 75kg (z> 3) ; Ht: 163cm (z<0); BMI: 28.2 (z>3)
CR 110 beats/min; RR 30 breaths/min; T 36.5 C; BP 110/60 mmHg
(p 25)
Warm and moist skin, dark pigmentation of skin creases and
flexural areas, most prominent along the nape
Pink palpebral conjunctivae, anicteric sclerae
Physical Examination:
No alar flaring, no nasoaural discharge, intact tympanic
membrane, AU
Moist buccal mucosa, no dental carries, non-hyperemic posterior
pharyngeal walls, tonsils not enlarged
Supple neck, no cervical lymphadenopathies, no thyroid
enlargement
No retractions, symmetrical chest expansion, clear breath
sounds
Adynamic precordium, PMI at 5th left intercostal space
midclavicular line, regular rate and rhythm no heaves, thrills, lifts
or murmurs
Physical Examination:
Globularly enlarged abdomen, no striae, normoactive bowel
sounds, no organomegaly, no tenderness, no masses
Grossly male, bilaterally descended testes, Tanner St. II
Full and equal peripheral pulses, capillary refill time less than 2
seconds, no cyanosis, no edema
No limitation in range of motion of all joints
Neurological Exam:
Cerebrum: conscious, coherent, oriented to 3 spheres
Cranial nerves: pupils isocoric, 2-3mm equally reactive to liht, (+)
direct and consensual light reflex, extraocular movements full
and intact, can clench teeth, (-) gross facial asymmetry, gross
hearing intact, (+) gag reflex, can turn head from side to side
against resistance, tongue midline
Cerebellum: (-) no involuntary movements, able to do tandem
gait
Neurologic Examination
Reflexes: ++ on all extremities
Motor: (-) rigidity, (-) spasticity, (-) flaccidity, (-)
deficits
Sensory: (-) deficits
Meningeal Signs: (-) nuchal rigidity, (-) Brudzinski’s, () Kernig’s, (-) tonic neck reflex
Diagnosis:
Obesity
Hyperglycemia probably secondary to
Diabetes Mellitus Type II
Middle Adolescent with Psychosocial
Issues (Body Image)
Obesity
“Excessive storage of
energy as FAT relative
to lean body mass”
Energy intake exceeds
expenditure
Definition based on BMI
Pediatrics
Obese - BMI> 95% for gender and age
At risk/overweight - BMI=85-95%
Adults
Obese – BMI> 30
Overweight – BMI=25-30
Measurement
Weight
Weight:Height
BMI
kg÷m2
Skin Thickness
Waist:Hip Ratio
Growth Charts
Patient
Incidence: Worldwide
Variable definitions
Increasing incidence in developed and developing
nations
Similar prevalence to US: Latin America, Caribbean,
Middle East, Northern Africa, Central-Eastern Europe
Asia and Africa: no increase in incidence
Worldwide
Gayya et. al (2008) FNRI – DOST digest January 2014
Asian Prevalence
Thailand – 23%
Taipei – 28%
Vietnam – 14 – 16%
Gayya et. al (2008) FNRI – DOST digest January 2014
Trends in children and adolescents
20%
15%
2 -5 yrs
6 - 11 yrs
12 - 19 yrs
10%
5%
0%
1963- 1965
1966- 1970
1971- 1974
1976- 1980
1988- 1994
1999- 2002
Gayya et. al (2008) FNRI – DOST digest January 2014
Etiology
Heterogeneous and
Multifactorial
Environmental
Psychosocial
Genetic
Sex Difference
Males – Increased visceral fat
Females – Increased hip fat
At all ages females have more adipose tissue than
males
Genetics vs. Environment
Weights of adopted children correlate better with
biological parents
BMIs of identical twins reared apart= together
Monozygotic twins more similar in fat deposition and
weight than dizygotic twins
Reference
Obesity
Differential Diagnosis
Idiopathic
Endocrine:
Hypothyroidism
Hypercortisolism
Growth hormone
deficiency
Genetic
Prader-Willi
Turner
Differential Diagnosis
CNS conditions: hypothalamic damage
Medications
Glucocorticoids
Phenothiazines
Lithium
Amytryptiline
Estrogen/progesterone
Physiology of Regulation Of Energy
Expenditure
Polypeptide Y
From L cells of small intestine
Reduce food intake
Ghrelin
Stimulates food intake
Elevated in Prader Willi
Pathogenesis
LEPTIN - Adipostatic signal
(1994)
produced by adipose tissue
Acts on Hypothalamus
Decreases food intake
Increases energy
expenditure
Leptin
Low neuropeptide Y stimulates appetite
High MSH inhibits appetite
Fasting decreases Leptin
Eating increases Leptin
Leptin and Obesity
Common obesity due to multiple allelic variations in
hundreds of genes
Monogenic obesity
Leptin deficiency
Leptin insensitivity
Hypothalamus
Central role of energy intake
Lesions cause hyperphagia and obesity
Environmental Factors:
Increased Energy Input
High caloric-density
food
Supersized portions
Eating out
Working parents
Advertising
Environmental Factors:
Decreased Energy Expenditure
TV
Computers
Transportation
Inadequate safe areas
for physical activity
Sedentary Lifestyle
Complications
Diabetes (Type 2)
Hypertension and Heart Disease
Neurologic Complications
Respiratory Disease
Orthopedic Condition
Psychosocial Disorders
Hyperlipidemia
GI Manifestations
Menstrual Disorders
Metabolic Syndrome
Clustering of CV risk factors related to insulin
resistance
Not well defined in Pediatrics
Insulin resistance
Dyslipidemia
Hypertension
Obesity
DOES OUR PATIENT HAVE MS?
Course in the Clinics
First consult
Laboratories:
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus with
Obesity
Metformin (20 mkday)
Referred to Nutrition Clinic for
dietary modification
Increase physical activity
Universal Assessment of Obesity Risk: Steps to Prevention and Treatment
American Academy of Pediatrics. Pediatric Obesity Clinical Decision Support Chart.
Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics; 2008.
Steps to Prevention and
Treatment of Pediatric Obesity
Steps to Prevention and
Treatment of Pediatric Obesity
Prevention Plus BMI >85%
Diet Modification
Build on prevention
Eating behaviors
Family meals at least 5 to 6 times per week
Allow child to self-regulate his or her meals
Avoid overly restrictive behaviors—“Parents provide,
child decides.”
Structured activity
American Academy of Pediatrics. Pediatric
Obesity Clinical Decision Support Chart, 2008
Prevention Plus BMI >85%
Diet Modification
Goal: weight maintenance with growth a
decreasing BMI as age increases
Monthly follow-up for 3 to 6 months
If no improvement go to Stage 2
American Academy of Pediatrics. Pediatric
Obesity Clinical Decision Support Chart, 2008
Prevention Plus BMI >85%
Physical Activity/Inactivity
60 minutes of moderate physical activity per day or
20 minutes of vigorous activity 3 times a week
Community activity programs
Family activities
Pedometer use
Limit screen time to <2 hours per day
No TV/computer in bedroom
American Academy of Pediatrics. Pediatric
Obesity Clinical Decision Support Chart, 2008
American Academy of Pediatrics. Pediatric
Obesity Clinical Decision Support Chart, 2008
Global IDF/ ISPAD Guideline
Pharmacotherapy: Metformin
Approved for Type 2 diabetes and hyperinsulinemia
Decreases hepatic glucose production
Enhances insulin sensitivity
Results in modest weight loss
Side effects: nausea, flatulance, bloating, diarrhea,
lactic acidosis
Pharmacotherapy
Not approved for pediatrics
Drug options
Appetite suppressants
Serotonin agonists
Inhibitors of fat absorption
Antihyperglycemic agents
Course in the Clinics
Second consult
Gradual weight loss of 1.8%
75 kilograms to 73.6 kilograms
BMI from 28.2 to 27.7 (z > 2)
TABLE OF LABS
Steps to Prevention and
Treatment of Pediatric Obesity
Structured Weight Management
Dietary and physical activity behaviors
Balanced macronutrient diet with low amounts of
energy-dense foods
Increased structured daily meals and snacks
Supervised active play: 60 minutes a day
Screen time: 1 hour or less a day
Increased monitoring
Structured Weight Management
Weight maintenance
Decreases BMI as age and height increases
Weight loss
1 lb/month: 2–11 years old
or
2 lb/week: older overweight/obese children and adolescents
If no improvement in BMI/weight after 3 to 6 months
Stage III
Counseling
Steps to Prevention and
Treatment of Pediatric Obesity
Obesity
Treatment: Surgery
Gastric bypass
Gastic plication
Gastric banding
Jejuno-ileal bypass no
longer performed
Not routine for children
Course in the Clinics
Sustained weight loss
73.6 kilograms to 72.7 kilograms
BMI
27.7 to 27.3 (z >2)
Course in the Clinics
Regular follow up at the
Endocrinology clinic
every three months
Continuation of weight
loss
70kg, with a BMI of 25.9
(z > 1)
Disappearance of the
skin hyperpigmentation
around the nape area
Final Diagnosis:
Overweight
Diabetes Mellitus Type II,
controlled
ADOLESCENT?
Childhood Obesity
Conclusion
Heterogeneous
disorder
Multifactorial causes
Global epidemic
Genetics
Sedentary lifestyle
Too much in
Too little out