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Children at Risk for Adult Diabetes

07/08/2021 by Julie RN DCES Leave a Comment

Children at Risk for Chronic Disease Due to Obesity refers to the chronic diseases that your child is predisposed to if they are overweight, such as diabetes and heart disease. Read more to learn how you can evaluate your child's risk and what you can do about it.

Children at risk type 2 diabetes due to obesity

In previous generations, the medical profession had few occasions to monitor children for adult health issues. Today, children are experiencing increasing problems with high blood pressure, high cholesterol and other health problems related to obesity. Although obesity is ever increasing in children, many times our health care system is lagging behind in identification and approved treatment.   

Obesity is the main cause for kids being at risk for Type 2 diabetes and heart disease. Children are classified as overweight who are above the 85th percentile for age and sex. To be classified as obese, a child’s BMI will be over the 95th percentile for age and sex or their weight is greater than 120% over ideal for height(1). But being at risk for diabetes is much more than just a weight issue.

First: If one or both parents have been diagnosed with diabetes, then the child has the genetics putting them at risk for diabetes.

According to the SEARCH study, at least 75% of youth diagnosed with type 2 have at least one close family member who has diabetes. (Close family members include mother father sisters or brothers.)  (searchfordiabetes.org)

Second: If the child’s BMI (body mass index) is over 28, it indicates that their life-style places them at additional risk. 

BMI can be misleading on its own. You should also consider waist circumference. (http://www.cdc.gov/healthyweight/assessing/bmi/childrens_bmi/about_childrens_bmi.html)

(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2851850/) 

Third: If they have high blood pressure. This one is tricky because blood pressure can be affected by many things including anxiety. If you or your child become anxious about going to the doctor, then chances are your blood pressure will be elevated. Taking several deep breaths before taking the blood pressure can help. It is important to get an accurate reading. 

If you would like to monitor a child’s blood pressure, there are automatic machines available at most pharmacies and many department stores. I recommend using one of these machines because they are more reliable (ensure accurate readings) as compared to home monitors. Doctors are wanting blood pressure reading less than the 90th percentile on at least three measurements.(2) You can refer to the CDC guidelines for these recommended values.

(http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/growthcharts/training/modules/module3/text/bloodpressure.htm)

The rule of thumb for children age 7-15 years old is: multiple 2 times your child’s age and add 90. This gives you the median for systolic pressure (the upper number). For the diastolic (lower number) subtract 30-45 from your systolic number. This is just an average number, the number you get can be higher or lower (for more information see: http://www.fpnotebook.com/CV/Exam/PdtrcVtlSgns.htm)

Fourth: Dyslipidemia. Now that is a big word! It means high cholesterol or high triglycerides. You need a fasting blood test to check for these conditions. Ask your doctor for this information.

Fifth: High Blood Sugar. Teens with a fasting blood glucose (FBG) 100 – 125 mg/dL or a random blood test greater than 199 mg/dL are at risk. For children younger than their teens, you should consult your pediatrician for this information. A1C is a non-fasting blood test. The results will vary with the age of your child. 

A1C is not recommended to use to diagnose diabetes in children so it may not be covered by insurance. It is a good indicator if your teen’s tolerance to sugar is a problem. Younger children run higher blood sugars and the A1C test is not recommended for them. The readings for A1C are determined by the age of the child and industry standards have NOT be determined (as of this writing).

American Diabetes Association recommends testing asymptomatic youth for Type 2 if they are overweight plus any 2 of the following risk factors:  

  • Diabetes screening should be repeated every three years.
  • Family history of Type 2 in first or second degree relatives
  • Native American, Latino, African American, Asian or Pacific Islander ethnicity
  • Mother with a history of gestational diabetes during the child’s gestation
  • Signs of insulin resistance or conditions associated with insulin resistance including acanthosis nigricans, hypertension, dyslipidemia, polycystic ovary syndrome or small for gestational age birth weight(3)

Symptoms of high blood sugar include:

  • Unusual Thirst (they can’t drink enough)
  • Frequent urination (going to the bathroom more than once in the night)
  • Headaches, especially after eating sugary foods
  • Tired, no energy; especially after a meal
  • Unusually hungry; (I have seen these kids start eating two full lunches – this indicates a hormone imbalance)
  • Anxious (there are times when they want food NOW)

For more information about how to teach your kids and your family good habits for a healthy future, check out my healthy kids and family 30 day virtual program.

1) American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in diabetes – 2013. Diabetes Care. 2013;36 (suppl 1): S11-S66.

2) Expert Panel on Integrated Guidelines for Cardiovascular Health and Risk Reduction in Children and Adolescents; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Expert Panel on Integrated Guidelines for Cardiovascular Health and Risk Reduction in Children and Adolescents: summary report. Pediatrics. 2011;128 (suppl 5):S213-S256.

3) American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Care. 2013;36 (suppl 1) S11-S66

 

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Filed Under: Children, Health, Prediabetes

Alcohol and Diabetes a Deadly Combination

12/01/2020 by Julie RN DCES 2 Comments

We need to educate our teens and ourselves on the effects alcohol has on our blood sugar. Did you know that low blood sugar looks A LOT like being drunk or hung over? Read more about it!

I know alcohol is never recommended in children under the legal age. But teens often have access to alcohol, so it is important for them to understand the effects on their blood sugar. This is particularly important when parents are preparing their children for college. I worked in a college town and many students end up in the ER with blood sugar problems.

So many people with prediabetes are in denial. This is especially true in teens. But that doesn’t mean they are exempt from the side effects of uncontrolled blood sugars. Parents need to take an active role in educating their young adults in the problems of alcohol before they head to college…..

Alcohol Can Adversely Effect The Body’s Ability To Regulate Energy

As you know, excess alcohol effects your liver functions. Your body’s energy regulation actually starts in the liver. That is the reason doctors use Metformin as the first medication with prediabetes. Improving the function of the liver by 20% will improve blood sugars by 80%.

Initially alcohol could raise your blood sugar (particularly with beer), but alcohol works in the liver to prevent stored sugars from being released. So it can actually cause low blood sugars during the night while you sleep. It is important to eat a snack of protein and carbs before going to sleep. It is even more important to not sleep in late in the morning (like most college student tend to do).

What You Should Do

Set an alarm, and if you can, check your blood sugar and eat breakfast! Then if you want to go back to bed, no problem. The main problem is that your blood sugar could go too low while you’re “sleeping it off”. That feeling of being hung-over may actually be low blood sugar.

Also, please feel free to email me if you have questions that aren’t answered here!

How Alcohol Affects Blood Sugar

Low Blood Sugar Symptoms

The side effects from low blood sugar looks similar to drunkenness. This is a dangerous situation. Symptoms of low blood sugar without diabetes include:

  • Paleness
  • Headaches
  • Shakiness or trembling
  • Blurred vision or Dizziness
  • Lack of energy or fatigue
  • Poor Coordination
  • Irritability, anxiety, agitation
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Excess sweating or perspiration
  • Problems concentrating, confusion
  • Decreased consciousness or loss of consciousness

This is really important with kids that are going to college. They will drink alcohol. So educate them about it.

Any questions, send me a message at Julie@kidsatriskfordiabetes.com.

http://www.healthclop.mailto:Julie@kidsatriskfordiabetes.comcom/low-blood-sugar-without-diabete

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Filed Under: Children, Diabetes, Prediabetes, Uncategorized Tagged With: alcohol and low blood sugar, low blood sugar, prediabetes and alcohol effects, teen education

Prevent Birth Defects from uncontrolled blood sugars

11/28/2020 by Julie RN DCES Leave a Comment

Uncontrolled blood sugars can cause serious birth defects.

It is unfortunate that I find a need to present this information. I have experience working with thousands of teens and unfortunately many of them get pregnant. I am located in the American Bible belt. They encourage schools to teach “abstinence only” in sex education classes. In today’s society, it appears to not be effective in controlling unwanted pregnancies.

Never trust your schools to adequately prepare your children for pregnancy prevention.

All parents need to take an active role in the discussion of sex and the importance of contraception. Do not expect your child to be adequately informed by the school’s sex education classes.

Know your risks. Research shows, if the mother has gestational diabetes, the child is at increased risk for diabetes. There are a variety of risk factors that can be found on the CDC’s website on Diabetes. You can take their survey to evaluate your child’s risks.

Type 2 diabetics are at risk for the most serious complications in unplanned pregnancies. About 7% of embryos developed with high blood sugars also develop Spinal Bifida. There are other brain and heart malformations that are associated with uncontrolled diabetes.

Typically, babies born under gestational diabetes are over nine pounds. Doctors recommend C-sections due to the increased possibility of broken bones during birth (particularly the collar bone).

The most serious health issue is high blood pressure in the mothers. This can be life threatening to the pregnant woman. If the mother develops high blood pressure, she will often times be placed in the hospital on bed rest until the baby is developed enough to be induced. There is a risk of underdeveloped lungs in the newborn and high medical cost for intensive care for the newborn.

There is a wide variety of birth defects associate with high blood sugars.

All diabetics need to seek pre-conception counseling before getting pregnant.

If you are interested, I have a 30 day course for gestational diabetes.

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Filed Under: Children, Diabetes, Motherhood Tagged With: birth defects, blood sugar, unplanned pregnancy

Childhood Obesity: 3rd in a Series

05/24/2019 by Julie RN DCES 39 Comments

Parents have the responsibility to provide a healthy environment for their children.

But what is involved in a healthy environment?

  • A clean house with a safe sleeping arrangement
  • Providing for good hygiene
  • Emotional support and teaching coping skills
  • A sense of family connections
  • Add your own, this list can be very long!

Our health is holistic in nature. Without good sleep, you will not cope well with the anxieties of life. Without good food, you will not grow and develop properly. One part affects another, which will affect their health today and into the future.

Little changes make a big impact over time

Little changes you make have a ripple effect over time. If you switch from whole milk to 1% milk, you save 45 calories per glass OR 135 calories in 3 glasses each day. This is 945 calories per week, which equals 14 pounds in a year.

One hundred calories saved each day equals 10 pounds lost in a year. When you buy reduced fat milk, you change your environment at home. Small changes like buying lower fat foods can make a big difference over time. Your children are dependent on what you provide, so it’s up to you to make these little changes.

  • When you buy healthier breakfast cereal, they will eat it
  • Or switch to whole grain toast
  • When you buy cookies with less sugar, they will eat them
  • When you buy low-fat chips, they will eat them
  • If you buy apples, with a little prep, they will eat them too!

Cut out 100 calories and reduce sugar

Remember, 100 extra calories each day will cause you to gain 10 pounds each year. Considering how small the 100 calorie snack packs are, you can see how it is easy to eat too many calories each day. That’s why most Americans are gaining weight every year.

It is easier to avoid the temptations in the grocery store than it is to resist eating it every day once you bring it home. This should be a whole family affair. Don’t buy something for your mate and expect your children to resist eating it. It is unrealistic to expect your children to resist eating something you have in the house.

Changing to a lower sugar diet may be challenging to the whole family. But to provide a healthy future, it is important for you to control the amount of sugar in your children’s daily diet. Work with your children to find acceptable solutions. Help them make good decisions about the foods you provide in your home.

Incorporate exercise

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently changed its recommendations for daily exercise.  Never before have they recommended 2-year-olds get added activities. The CDC realizes that parents need to encourage children at a young age to “move their way”. Dancing is a good example. Put music on and it is natural for kids to dance. Find things your children like to do.

Included in the CDC’s recommendations is a limit on screen time based on age. Screen time includes television and computer games. Parents need to be aware of what their children are doing. Encourage them to get involved in activities.

Be the architect of your home

Children depend on parents to provide a good home environment. By keeping focused on their future, you will be motivated to do the right things.

For more information about the holistic nature of children’s health, download my free ebook. 👉 But before you download that, please make sure you’ve signed up for my email list! Anytime I put out a freebie, you’ll get a copy just for being on my list!

For more information about raising healthy children, please see my program, Kids at Risk for Diabetes.

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Filed Under: Children, Health, Nutrition Tagged With: childhood obesity, children nutrition, lifestyle changes

Childhood Diabetes Progresses Quickly

05/24/2019 by Julie RN DCES 2 Comments

Life Lessons:

We just don’t go through life.

We grow through life’s experiences.

Some lessons can be very difficult to accept. Being diagnosed with diabetes is one of them.

Your first reactions is shock. How can this be? Followed closely by denial. The test must be wrong? Next comes frustration or anger. How can this be happening to me? Followed by bargaining. If I lose weight it will go away.

Eventually, after failing to keep the required weight off, you become depressed. You realize this is going to be your life; it is not going away. Then you start to seek realistic solutions, usually involving taking medication. Finally your perception changes to acceptance.

So many times, people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes take a long time to move through these normal changes. Many times they develop complications from uncontrolled blood sugars before accepting their diagnoses.

Time isn’t a luxury with childhood diabetes

Unfortunately, with youth-onset type 2 in young people, you don’t have that time. Progression is much quicker. Once weight-challenged children are diagnosed with type 2, it is too late to reverse their beta cell destruction.

Type 2 in children is very different from adult on-set.

  • Unlike adults, children’s problems with blood sugar have more to do with fatty liver disease than with insulin resistance.
  • Unlike adults, children with type 2 can lose up to 37% of their beta cells in one year.
  • Unlike adults, as soon as their blood sugar cannot be controlled with medications, they need insulin.

Because of the worldwide obesity epidemic, it has been predicted that we will experience a public health catastrophe. We need to improve the overall wellness of our children during childhood. Parents cannot wait until their child is diagnosed.

Knowledge is power!  To determine your child’s risk for type 2 diabetes, download my checklist. If any of the items on this list pertain to your child or children, you should consider my 30-day kid’s program.

If you want to start protecting your family, my kid’s program is good for the whole family!

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Childhood Obesity: 1st in a Series

05/23/2019 by Julie RN DCES 2 Comments

Children at Risk for Chronic Disease Due to Obesity refers to the chronic diseases that your child is predisposed to if they are overweight, such as diabetes and heart disease. Read more to learn how you can evaluate your child's risk and what you can do about it.

Part 1:  If you wait until they are diagnosed, it is too late.

This is the beginning. We call it obesity; children measuring over the 85th percentile for weight given their age and height. We used to call it morbid obesity because it triggers chronic health conditions that can threaten your life. Weight problems in children can affect their future health, either more immediately or as they become young adults.

The difference between adult and childhood diabetes

When an adult is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, they are told to lose 10% of their body weight and it may revert to prediabetes. This is not true in children! Type 2 diabetes progresses so quickly in children, many of them are put on insulin within two years.

Prediabetes in adults can last ten years or more. In children, prediabetes progresses into type 2 within 12 months. Plus, by the time they are diagnosed with type 2, their beta cells are already dying off. Type 2 in children, the beta cells can die up to 37% per year. This cannot be reversed with current medications. Hospitals can test to determine if the child has type 1 or type 2. But many of them need insulin as soon as they are diagnosed.

Puberty causes many changes

Weight problems accelerate during puberty. Children who may be above normal weight before puberty can quickly change during puberty due to human growth hormone. Their body grows and develops quickly during this time. Parents should monitor their child’s BMI (Body Mass Index) during this phase. (Note: I recommend parents use the CDC charts for BMI including waist circumference for a more accurate evaluation.) https://www.cdc.gov/healthyweight/assessing/bmi/childrens_bmi/about_childrens_bmi.html

If you see significant changes in their BMI, talk to your child about what they are doing.

  • Have they increased junk foods?
  • Are they eating out more?
  • Are they playing more computer games?
  • How has their daily life changed?

Daily choices now will affect their future

Encourage them to be mindful of how their daily choices are affecting their future.

Healthy living today will be the key to minimizing future health problems. Children’s weight over the 85th percentile can cause problems like high blood pressure, which over time triggers other problems like heart disease and strokes. (Narasimhan, 2015)

Severely obese children (the 95th percentile or more for weight) are at risk for serious health conditions like fatty liver disease. Fatty liver disease in children is linked to early-onset type 2 diabetes and multiple complications from insulin resistance. (Narasimhan, 2015)

Summary

It’s sad but true: research proves that if the parent waits until the child is diagnosed, the damage is already done. Please don’t wait!

Resources

For more information about how weight gain can affect your child’s overall health, check out this article I recently published.

For more information on healthy lifestyle habits in children, part 2 in this series talks about lifestyle changes!

For information about my program Kids at Risk for Diabetes, please check out my course for the whole family.

If you always want to be notified when I publish a new article or blog post, please join my mailing list using the form below!

References

Narasimhan, S. a. (2015, Jun 1). HS Public Access. Retrieved from Youth-Onset Type 2 Diabetes: Lessons Learned from the Today Study: https://www.ncbi.nim.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4319667/

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Filed Under: Children, Diabetes, Prediabetes Tagged With: childhood diabetes, childhood obesity

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