| Literature DB >> 28439217 |
Victoria Higgins1,2, Khosrow Adeli1,2.
Abstract
Pediatric overweight and obesity is an emerging public health priority as rates have rapidly increased worldwide. Obesity is often clustered with other metabolic abnormalities including hypertension, dyslipidemia, and insulin resistance, leading to increased risk of cardiovascular disease. This cluster of risk factors, termed the metabolic syndrome, has traditionally been reported in adults. However, with the increased prevalence of pediatric obesity, the metabolic syndrome is now evident in children and adolescents. This complex cluster of risk factors is the result of the pathological interplay between several organs including adipose tissue, muscle, liver, and intestine with a common antecedent - insulin resistance. The association of the metabolic syndrome with several systemic alterations that involve numerous organs and tissues adds to the complexity and challenge of diagnosing the metabolic syndrome and identifying useful clinical indicators of the disease. The complex physiology of growing and developing children and adolescents further adds to the difficulties in standardizing laboratory assessment, diagnosis, and prognosis for the diverse pediatric population. However, establishing a consensus definition is critical to identifying and managing children and adolescents at high risk of developing the metabolic syndrome. As a result, the examination of novel metabolic syndrome biomarkers which can detect these metabolic abnormalities early with high specificity and sensitivity in the pediatric population has been of interest. Understanding this complex cluster of risk factors in the pediatric population is critical to ensure that this is not the first generation where children have a shorter life expectancy than their parents. This review will discuss the pathophysiology, consensus definitions and laboratory assessment of pediatric metabolic syndrome as well as potential novel biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease; insulin resistance; metabolic syndrome; obesity; pediatric
Year: 2017 PMID: 28439217 PMCID: PMC5387698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJIFCC ISSN: 1650-3414
IDF consensus definition of the Metabolic Syndrome in children and adolescents
| Age (years) | Obesity (WC) | Triglycerides | HDL-C | Blood pressure | Glucose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥ 90th percentile | Metabolic syndrome cannot be diagnosed, but further measurements should be made if there is a family history of metabolic syndrome, T2DM, dyslipidemia, cardiovascular disease, hypertension and/or obesity | ||||
| ≥ 90th percentile or adult cut-off if lower | ≥1.7 mmol/L (≥150 mg/dL) | <1.03 mmol/L (<40 mg/dL) | Systolic ≥130/ diastolic ≥85 mm Hg | ≥5.6 mmol/L (100 mg/dL) | |
| Central obesity (defined as waist circumference ≥ 94cm for Europid men and ≥ 80cm for Europid women) | ≥1.7 mmol/L (≥150 mg/dL) | <1.03 mmol/L (<40 mg/dL) in males and <1.29 mmol/L (<50 mg/dL) in females, or specific treatment for these lipid measurements | Systolic ≥130/ diastolic ≥85 mm Hg, or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension | Fasting plasma glucose ≥5.6 mmol/L (100 mg/dL), or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes | |
*Table adapted from (13).
WC: waist circumference; HDL-C: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; T2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test.
IDEFICS definition of the Metabolic Syndrome in children -monitoring level
| Age (years) | Obesity (WC) | Triglycerides | HDL-C | Blood pressure | Glucose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥ 90th percentile | ≥ 90th percentile | ≤ 10th percentile | Systolic ≥90th percentile or diastolic ≥ 90th percentile | HOMA-insulin resistance ≥ 90th percentile or fasting glucose ≥ 90th percentile |
*Table adapted from (69).
WC: waist circumference; HDL-C: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HOMA: homeostatic model assessment.