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(21-08-10) High cholesterol in children may drop naturally on its own over time



by Jonathan Benson, citizen journalist

A new study published in the journal Pediatrics has found that children with
high cholesterol may not need drug treatments to bring them back to normal,
healthy levels. Children who tested with high cholesterol levels initially in
the study eventually had their levels taper off, indicating that the process
may occur naturally over time, without the need for drugs.

Researchers explained that cholesterol levels can vary from day to day anyway,
and that testing is most accurate when done numerous times. There are "bad"
cholesterol days and "good" cholesterol days, and researchers believe that
tests showing extremely high levels may be indicative of a bad cholesterol day,
and not necessarily high cholesterol levels in general.

"Both in kids and in adults there is quite a bit of variability over time,"
explained David Freedman from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). "People with very, very high cholesterol are likely to be
those that are having a bad cholesterol day. My paper emphasizes that you
probably need at least two or three measurements to screen out kids who are
just having a bad day,"

In other words, prescribing children cholesterol medication without doing
multiple tests a few months apart may be a mistake, because children who test
high on one day might test far lower on another. And children who do have high
general levels may experience a drop over time naturally, without the need for
drug administration.

The study, which involved more than 6,800 children from Bogalusa, Louisiana,
found that after four years, cholesterol levels in children who initially
tested high dropped below threshold levels 60 percent of the time.

But even for children whose levels did not drop, experts are unsure whether
drug treatment is at all appropriate or helpful for children. Simple exercise
and a healthy diet may be enough to maintain healthy cholesterol levels.

"Daily exercise is one of the best and safest ways to control cholesterol
levels," explains Dr. Richard DiCenso in his book, Beyond Medicine, Exploring a
New Way of Thinking.

Sources for this story include:

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUS...

http://www.naturalpedia.com/cholest...

Source: NaturalNews

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