Childhood obesity and the associated rise in cardiometabolic complications.
Sonia CaprioNicola SantoroRam WeissPublished in: Nature metabolism (2020)
Childhood obesity is one of the most serious global public-health challenges of the twenty-first century. Over the past four decades, the number of children and adolescents with obesity has risen more than tenfold. Worldwide, an increasing number of youth are facing greater exposure to obesity throughout their lives, and this increase will contribute to the early development of type 2 diabetes, fatty liver and cardiovascular complications. Herein, we provide a brief overview of trends in the global shifts in, and environmental and genetic determinants of, childhood obesity. We then discuss recent progress in the elucidation of the central role of insulin resistance, the key element linking obesity and cardiovascular-risk-factor clustering, and the potential mechanisms through which ectopic lipid accumulation leads to insulin resistance and its associated cardiometabolic complications in obese adolescents. In the absence of effective prevention and intervention programs, childhood obesity will have severe public-health consequences for decades to come.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- public health
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet induced
- risk factors
- type diabetes
- weight loss
- high fat diet
- skeletal muscle
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- young adults
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- human health
- weight gain
- bariatric surgery
- early onset
- single cell
- body mass index
- climate change
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- copy number