The longitudinal data on physical activity collected in the NGHS cohort further confirm a dramatic decrease in the overall level of physical activity during the transition from childhood to adolescence. The consistency among the three methods indicate that both the AD and HAQ are useful tools for the assessment of activity levels in adolescent girls.
With a prevalence of 34% (55/162 at-risk recipients) and a mortality of 25% (14/55 affected recipients), obliterative bronchiolitis is the most significant long-term complication after pulmonary transplantation. Because of its importance, we examined donor-recipient characteristics and antecedent clinical events to identify factors associated with development of obliterative bronchiolitis, which might be eliminated or modified to decrease its prevalence. We also compared treatment outcome between recipients whose diagnosis was made early by surveillance transbronchial lung biopsy before symptoms or decline in pulmonary function were present versus recipients whose diagnosis was made later when symptoms or declines in pulmonary function were present. Postoperative airway ischemia, an episode of moderate or severe acute rejection (grade III/IV), three or more episodes of histologic grade II (or greater) acute rejection, and cytomegalovirus disease were risk factors for development of obliterative bronchiolitis. Recipients with obliterative bronchiolitis detected in the preclinical stage were significantly more likely to be in remission than recipients who had clinical disease at the time of diagnosis: 81% (13/15) versus 33% (13/40); p < 0.05). These results indicate that acute rejection is the most significant risk factor for development of obliterative bronchiolitis and that obliterative bronchiolitis responds to treatment with augmented immunosuppression when it is detected early by surveillance transbronchial biopsy.
ABSTRACT. Background. Black women are particularly vulnerable to obesity, with a prevalence rate of >50%. The higher mortality and morbidity from cardiovascular disease, stroke, and diabetes have been attributed, in part, to their obesity. In recent years, a particular public health concern is the increasing secular trend in obesity with an even greater racial disparity, especially in girls and women. Between the early 1960s and late 1980s, the prevalence of obesity tripled in young black girls 6 to 11 years of age, while it doubled in white girls. Similarly, both overweight and obesity in adolescent girls 12 to 17 years of age also increased, with a greater increase again seen in adolescent black girls. This secular trend in obesity with a greater increase in black girls signals a potentially grave future chronic disease burden on black women, which is already higher than in white women. The increasing occurrence in children and adolescents of noninsulin-dependent diabetes, traditionally viewed as an adult-onset condition, may be a consequence of the currently high prevalence of obesity in American youth. Not surprisingly, this condition is seen more frequently among black youths.Prepubescent black girls are generally leaner than agecomparable white girls, but by 20 years of age, black women are considerably heavier than are white women. Thus, it is assumed that the racial disparity in adiposity evolves during adolescence. However, the specific age at which this occurs and underlying factors are yet to be identified because of the current paucity of longitudinal cohort data.Objectives. In 1985, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) initiated a 10-year longitudinal multicenter study (the NHLBI Growth and Health Study [NGHS]) to investigate the development of obesity in black and white girls during adolescence and its environmental, psychosocial, and cardiovascular disease risk factor correlates. The purpose of this report is to examine the natural history of adiposity and weight accretion during adolescence in a biracial cohort of girls to investigate the evolution of the racial divergence in adiposity and to examine the relationships between increases in adiposity and pubertal maturation, energy intake, and physical activity.Participants and Setting. A total of 2379 black (51%) and white (49%) girls, 9 to 10 years of age, were recruited from public and parochial schools in Richmond, California, and Cincinnati, Ohio, and from families enrolled in a large health maintenance organization in the Washington, DC area. Participant eligibility was limited to girls and their parents who declared themselves as being either black or white and who lived in racially concordant households.Design and Statistical Analysis. The NGHS is a multicenter prospective study of black and white girls with annual visits from 9 to 10 years of age through 18 to 19 years of age. The follow-up rate was 89% at the 10th annual visit. Skinfold measurements were obtained at the triceps, suprailiac, and subscapular sites with Holt...
Indirect effects of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections in lung transplant recipients (LTX) have not previously been described in detail. We compared spirometric results, development of chronic rejection, rates of respiratory superinfections, and mortality as long as 2 yr after transplantation, between 62 LTX who never developed CMV (CMV-) and 56 LTX with a history of CMV pulmonary infections (CMV+). Initial spirometric parameters were near identical for both groups, but determinations > or = 6 months after transplantation showed that expiratory flows of the CMV+ were significantly reduced. Actuarial prevalences of chronic allograft rejection (CR) at 2 yr were highest among CMV+ with biopsy-proved pneumonitis (74%) compared with 22% among CMV- (p < 0.038). Bacterial or fungal pneumonias developed in 58.9% of the CMV+, whereas the rate among CMV- was 38.7% (p < 0.05). Only 36% of LTX with CMV pneumonitis lived 2 yr compared with 70% survival for CMV- (p < 0.016). Ganciclovir treatment of CMV infections decreased rates of respiratory superinfections and improved survival of patients, but it did not appear to affect subsequent development of CR. We conclude that CMV pulmonary infections among LTX result in serious late sequelae and that current treatment is ineffectual for prevention of viral-associated CR in these patients.
Abstract-The objective of this study was to assess the longitudinal changes in blood pressure in black and white adolescent girls and evaluate potential determinants of changes in blood pressure, including sexual maturation and body size. A total of 1213 black and 1166 white girls, ages 9 or 10 years at study entry, were followed up through age 14 with annual measurements of height, weight, skinfold thickness, stage of sexual maturation, systolic and diastolic blood pressures, and other cardiovascular risk factors. Average blood pressures in black girls were generally 1 to 2 mm Hg higher than in white girls of similar age over the course of the study. Age, race, stage of sexual maturation, height, and body mass index (kg/m 2 ) were all significant univariate predictors of systolic and diastolic blood pressures in longitudinal regression analyses. Black girls had a significantly smaller increase in blood pressure for a given increase in body mass index compared with white girls. The predicted increases in blood pressure per unit increase in body mass index (mm Hg per kg/m 2 ) were as follows: systolic, 0.65Ϯ0.04 in whites and 0.52Ϯ0.04 in blacks (PϽ.001); diastolic fourth Korotkoff phase, 0.31Ϯ0.04 in whites and 0.15Ϯ0.03 in blacks (PϽ.001); and diastolic fifth Korotkoff phase, 0.31Ϯ0.05 in whites and 0.16Ϯ0.04 in blacks (PϽ.001). Understanding of the determinants of the racial differences in blood pressure could provide the rationale for future interventions to reduce the excess cardiovascular mortality in black compared with white women. Key Words: blood pressure Ⅲ race Ⅲ obesity Ⅲ adolescents E levated blood pressure is more prevalent in black compared with white women at every age from 18 to 74 years. 1 This finding is one factor that may significantly contribute to the increased risk of earlier cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality observed in black women.2 However, the timing of the onset and course of racial differences in blood pressure is uncertain. The majority of investigations of blood pressure differences by race in childhood and adolescence have been cross-sectional in design. Some of these studies have found higher blood pressure in black children, 3,4 others have found no difference, 5,6 and still other studies have found higher blood pressure in white children. 7,8 The evaluation of potentially important covariates of blood pressure, including age, height, weight, obesity, and sexual maturation, in these studies has been variable. The evaluation of obesity is particularly important in this regard because obesity has been shown to be a risk factor for blood pressure elevation, and some studies have suggested a differential effect of obesity on blood pressure between white and black adults. -11The NGHS is a prospective cohort study designed to evaluate the emergence of differences in obesity and cardiovascular risk factors during adolescence in black and white girls.The purpose of the present report is to describe the longitudinal changes in blood pressure in black and white girls from age...
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