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Childhood Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes

Diseases like type 2 diabetes, once only found in adults, are now being diagnosed at an alarming rate in children as young as 10 years old. There are many medical and psychological repercussions to childhood obesity, but type 2 diabetes is now setting off the loudest alarms.

We didn’t hear much about type 2 diabetes in children until 1997, and even then, the numbers were small. It seemed inconceivable that children would have a disease not usually diagnosed in adults until their 40s, but as we see a rise in childhood obesity, there has also been a rise in type 2 diabetes.

In part because it has caught the medical community by surprise, there are very few statistics on how many children have type 2 diabetes. We do know that of all people diagnosed with diabetes — adults and children — 50 percent have type 2, the result of poor diet and not enough exercise. There are children from all ethnic groups, and as many boys as girls.

How does type 2 diabetes develop?
The body produces insulin to keep blood sugar levels normal. When the body can’t produce enough insulin or doesn’t use insulin properly it becomes “insulin-resistant,” and blood sugar levels skyrocket. Being insulin-resistant is a strong precursor of type 2 diabetes: 90% of children diagnosed as insulin-resistant risk developing type 2.

Most of the blame for insulin resistance goes to too many saturated fats and refined, sugary carbohydrates. Put simply, the more refined carbohydrates eaten, the more insulin that must be produced to handle the resulting elevation in blood sugar. The body reacts to the high levels of insulin by building up a resistance to it. Over time, this results in less and less effective blood sugar processing

Prevention

The best way to prevent insulin resistance is to eat a balanced diet, reducing intake of refined carbohydrates. Adequate exercise is important: thirty minutes of moderate exercise a day is optimal.

Early Warning Signs

  • Growth charts: if a child is off the charts in weight and sometimes height, or makes dramatic jumps in weight.
  • High blood sugar levels
  • Very thirsty
  • Urinating a lot
  • Feeling weak
  • Skin color — darkening of the skin at the base of the neck, in the folds of the arms or around the eyes.
  • Unhealed scars, boils, unhealed mosquito bites.
  • Cholesterol: Testing cholesterol is tricky because levels can test normal. But with type 2 diabetes, the good cholesterol (LDL) is usually too low, and the bad cholesterol (HDL) and triglycerides are usually elevated. As a result, the overall cholesterol level can appear normal, so the two cholesterols need to be tested separately.

Consequences:

  • High blood pressure
  • Early cardiovascular disease
    Kidney failure
    Eye changes that can lead to blindness

Difficulties In Treating Children
Kids don’t want to deal with this, and because they don’t end up in the hospital like people with type 1, it can go on and on without being treated. It’s very difficult for young children and teens to understand high blood sugar levels, so they don’t understand how important the diet and exercise is. Kids also need to have healthy options to choose from and the education to do so in order to make the right decisions about their health.

Teenagers or even junior high kids who have developed type 2 diabetes may have to deal with it their entire lives, but children in grammar school can still make the lifestyle changes needed if we start working on it now.


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