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Journal ArticleDOI

Lipids, lipoproteins, and sexual maturation during adolescence: The princeton maturation study

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TLDR
A cross-sectional and longitudinal examination of schoolchildren as they entered into and passed through puberty, examining interrelationships between lipids, lipoproteins, and sexual maturation suggested that the fall in C-HDL and late rise in C -LDL as sexual m maturity progresses is associated with increased testosterone production.
Abstract
This study encompassed a cross-sectional and longitudinal examination of schoolchildren as they entered into and passed through puberty, examining interrelationships between lipids, lipoproteins, and sexual maturation. In the first year of the study (1976), 529 schoolchildren in grades 5–12 participated; 203 were restudied in 1977, and 141 in 1978. At each yearly visit, the children's stage of sexual maturation was assessed using the Tanner scale. Plasma cholesterol and triglyceride were quantitated each year; high, low, and very low density lipoprotein cholesterol (C-HDL, C-LDL, C-VLDL) levels were measured in the second and third years of the study. In males, cross-sectional decrements in plasma cholesterol were observed with increasing sexual maturation (Tanner stages 1–4), with an increment at Tanner 5 (sexual maturity); plasma triglyceride levels rose at all stages save Tanner 4. The mid-Tanner fall in plasma cholesterol appears (longitudinally) to be accounted for by reduction in C-HDL, while the rise in plasma cholesterol at Tanner 5 may be produced by an increase in C-LDL. Changes in age and Quetelet indices did not appear to relate closely to changes in C-VLDL in 12- and 13-yr-old males, but increasing age and Quetelet indices in 14–15-yr old males accompanied increasing C-VLDL. Cross-sectional studies in females revealed that plasma cholesterol fell at Tanner stages 3 and 4 and rose at stage 5; plasma triglyceride rose during all stages except Tanner 4. Longitudinal studies suggested that the decrements in plasma cholesterol in females may be partially accounted for by reductions in C-HDL; the increase in plasma cholesterol in late sexual development may be accounted for by an increase in C-LDL. In male children, we speculate that the fall in C-HDL and late rise in C-LDL as sexual maturation progresses is associated with increased testosterone production.

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Citations
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Obesity Evaluation and Treatment: Expert Committee Recommendations

TL;DR: Recommendations for treatment evaluation included an assessment of patient and family readiness to engage in a weight-management program and a focused assessment of diet and physical activity habits, and a primary goal of obesity therapy should be healthy eating and activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevention of pediatric overweight and obesity.

Nancy F. Krebs, +1 more
- 01 Aug 2003 - 
TL;DR: This statement proposes strategies for early identification of excessive weight gain by using body mass index, for dietary and physical activity interventions during health supervision encounters, and for advocacy and research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex, plasma lipoproteins, and atherosclerosis: Prevailing assumptions and outstanding questions

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) is higher in men than in women due to differences in plasma lipoprotein risk factors between the sexes is reviewed and evidence relating these sex differences in CHD and lipoproteins to the effects of sex hormones is critically examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modification of risk factors for coronary heart disease. Five-year results of a school-based intervention trial.

TL;DR: The study of the effectiveness of an educational intervention designed to modify risk factors associated with coronary heart disease among 3388 children in 37 schools in two demographically dissimilar areas in and around New York City suggests that educational programs to modify coronary risk factors are feasible and may have a favorable effect on blood levels of cholesterol in children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early menarche and the development of cardiovascular disease risk factors in adolescent girls: the Fels Longitudinal Study.

TL;DR: Girls with early menarche exhibited elevated blood pressure and glucose intolerance compared with later maturing girls, independent of body composition, which adversely affected cardiovascular disease risk factor changes independent of age and changes in FFM or PBF.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Variations in pattern of pubertal changes in girls.

TL;DR: The extent of normal individual variation observed in the events of puberty among the girls of the Harpenden Growth Study is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variations in the Pattern of Pubertal Changes in Boys

TL;DR: Mixed longitudinal data on the physical changes at puberty in 228 normal boys are presented together with normal standards for stages of genital and pubic hair development, finding that boys' genitalia begin to develop only about 6 months later than the girls' breasts and Pubic hair appears about 1½ years later in boys than in girls.

HDL Cholesterol andOther Lipids inCoronary HeartDisease TheCooperative Lipoprotein Phenotyping Study

TL;DR: In this article, the correlation between coronary heart disease (CHD) prevalence and fasting lipid levels was assessed by case-control study infive populations with atotal of6859 men and women of black, Japanese and white ancestry drawn fromsubjects aged40 years andolder from populations inAlbany, Framingham, Evans County, Honolulu and San Francisco.
Journal ArticleDOI

HDL cholesterol and other lipids in coronary heart disease. The cooperative lipoprotein phenotyping study.

TL;DR: The relation between coronary heart disease (CHD) prevalence and fasting lipid levels was assessed by a case-control study in five populations with a total of 6859 men and women of black, Japanese and white ancestry drawn from subjects aged 40 years and older from populations in Albany, Framingham, Evans County, Honolulu and San Francisco as discussed by the authors.
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