| Literature DB >> 34886593 |
Abstract
Cholesterol, the main structural molecule of cell membranes, is involved in essential functions of the human body. Dyslipidemia is an established risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) that is observed even in childhood. To reduce the risk of CVDs in children, several clinical guidelines have been published for the management of pediatric dyslipidemia. However, pediatric dyslipidemia is also associated with several health problems other than CVDs. This article reviews the current data on dyslipidemia-related pediatric health issues. There is strong evidence that low serum vitamin D levels, asthma, and mental health problems may be associated with dyslipidemia in the pediatric population regardless of body mass index. This review also highlights the need for further large-scale population-based studies in the Korean pediatric population to establish effective strategies for promoting children's health.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; Cholesterol; Lipid; Mental health; Vitamin D
Year: 2021 PMID: 34886593 PMCID: PMC8841974 DOI: 10.3345/cep.2020.00934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pediatr ISSN: 2713-4148
Definition of childhood dyslipidemia
| Unit (mg/dL) | Acceptable | Borderline | Abnormal[ | The cutoffs of the 95th percentile in Korean pediatric data | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KNHANES (2007–2013) [ | KNHANES (2019) [ | ||||
| Total cholesterol | <170 | 170–199 | ≥200 | 203 | 210 (boys), 213 (girls) |
| LDL-C | <110 | 110–129 | ≥130 | 129 | |
| Non-HDL-C | <120 | 120–144 | ≥145 | 140–156 (boys), 149–158 (girls) | |
| Triglyceride | |||||
| 0–9 yr | <75 | 75–99 | ≥100 | ||
| 10–19 yr | <90 | 90–129 | ≥130 | 185 | 188 (boys), 167 (girls) |
| HDL-C | >45 | 40–45 | <40 | 38[ | |
KNHANES, Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (year surveys performed); LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HDL-C, highdensity lipoprotein cholesterol
The levels correspond to the 95th percentile for total cholesterol, LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and triglyceride and the 10th percentile for HDL-C.
Summary of studies on vitamin D metabolism related to childhood dyslipidemia
| Health problems | Study | Study design | Subjects number | Subjects characteristics | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serum 25(OH)D levels | Ha et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 310 | Koreans aged 10–12 years | Inverse association with TC and TG levels |
| No association with HDL-C levels | |||||
| Low vitamin D (serum 25[OH]D <15.5 ng/mL) | Lee et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 1,660 | Koreans aged 9 years | Association with high TG |
| No association with low HDL-C | |||||
| Vitamin D insufficiency (serum 25[OH]D ≤20 ng/mL) | Nam et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 1,540 | Koreans aged 12–18 years | No association with high TG and low HDL-C |
| Serum 25(OH)D levels | Kim and Jeong [ | Cross-sectional | 243 | Nonobese Koreans aged 9–18 years | Inverse association with TG levels and TG/HDL-C ratio |
| Vitamin D deficiency (serum 25[OH]D ≤20 ng/mL) | Song et al., [ | Cross-sectional | 2,581 | Nonobese Koreans aged 12–18 years | Association with low HDL-C |
| No association with high TC, high TG, and high LDL-C | |||||
| Vitamin D supplementation (1,000 IU) daily | Tavakoli et al., [ | RCT | 20 Trial | Healthy Iranians aged 10–14 years | Increased HDL-C levels |
| 20 Placebo | |||||
| Vitamin D supplementation (50,000 IU) weekly | Khayyatzadeh et al., [ | Prospective interventional | 940 | Iranian girls aged 12–18 years | Decreased TC and LDL-C levels |
| No effect on HDL-C levels | |||||
| Vitamin D supplementation (50,000 IU) monthly | Yarparvar et al., [ | RCT | 34 Trial | Healthy Iranian boys aged 17 years | Decreased TG levels and increased HDL-C levels |
| 37 Placebo | |||||
| Serum 25(OH)D levels | Kelishadi et al., [ | Meta-analysis | 25,394 | 17 cross-sectional pediatric studies | Weak inverse association with TC, TG, and LDL-C levels, and direct association with HDL-C levels |
| Vitamin D supplementation | Hauger et al., [ | Meta-analysis | 1,088 | 14 RCT pediatric studies | Increased LDL-C levels |
| No effects on TC, HDL-C, and TG levels |
25(OH)D, 25-hydroxy vitamin D; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglyceride; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
The results were analyzed after adjusting for body fatness/body mass index and/or sex.
Summary of studies on respiratory diseases related to childhood dyslipidemia
| Health problems | Study | Study design | Subjects number | Subjects characteristics | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physician-diagnosed asthma | Cottrell et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 17,994 | Americans (91% Caucasian) aged 4–12 years | Association with high TG levels |
| Physician-diagnosed asthma | Park et al., [ | Cross-sectional | 644 | Koreans, aged 15–16 years | Association with high HDL in males |
| Self-reported asthma | Ko et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 2,841 | Koreans aged 11–18 years | Association with high TC and TG/ HDL-C levels |
| Self-reported asthma | Lu et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 23,841 | Americans (59% Caucasian) aged 3–19 years | No association with low HDL-C and high TC, LDL-C, and TG levels |
| Physician-diagnosed asthma | Mensink-Bout et al., [ | Prospective cohort[ | 4,988 | European 68%, at the age of 6 and 10 years | No association with TC, HDL-C, and TG levels |
| Asthma | Peng and Huang [ | Meta- analysis | 891 Cases, 5,530 controls | 2 Prospective and 3 crosssectional pediatric studies | Association with low HDL-C levels |
| No association with LDL-C levels | |||||
| Asthma | Su et al., [ | Meta- analysis | 32,604 | Including 9 pediatric studies out of 20 studies | Association with high TC and LDL-C levels |
| No association with TG and HDL-C levels |
TG, triglyceride; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; TC, total cholesterol; HDL-C, HDL-cholesterol; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
The results were analyzed after adjusting for body fatness/body mass index and/or sex.
Summary of studies on mental and behavioral health problems related to childhood dyslipidemia
| Health problems | Study | Study design | Subjects number | Subjects characteristics | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suicidal tendencies | Apter et al., [ | Cross-sectional | 152 | Jews psychiatric inpatients aged 12–21 years | Association with high TC levels |
| Suicide attempt | Plana et al., [ | Case-control | 66 Cases | Hispanics aged 8–18 years | Association with low TC levels |
| 54 Controls | |||||
| Self-reported depressive mood | Kim et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 2,454 | Koreans aged 12–18 years | Association with high LDL-C levels in boys |
| Self-reported depressive symptoms | Park et al., [ | Prospective cohort[ | 1,071 | Koreans aged 15–16 years | Association with consistently low or increased TC levels during adolescence in boys |
| Daytime excessive sleepiness | Sung et al., [ | Cross-sectional[ | 618 | Korean aged 10–12 years | Association with low HDL-C levels |
TC, total cholesterol; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
The results were analyzed after adjusting for household income, dietary intake, body fatness/body mass index, and/or sex.