An article from The Hindu
A balanced breakfast provides more than just a great start to the day.
A balanced breakfast provides more than just a great start to the day.
Teens who eat poor breakfasts are more likely to
develop metabolic syndrome — a group of health problems that can
increase the risk of heart attack, stroke, and diabetes — in adulthood, a
new study has warned.
Researchers from Umea
University in Sweden found that adolescents who ate poor breakfasts
displayed a higher incidence of metabolic syndrome 27 years later,
compared with those who ate more substantial breakfasts.
Metabolic
syndrome is a collective term for factors that are linked to an
increased risk of suffering from cardiovascular disorders, researchers
said.
Metabolic syndrome encompasses abdominal
obesity, high levels of harmful triglycerides, low levels of protective
HDL (High Density Lipoprotein), high blood pressure and high fasting
blood glucose levels.
The new study asked all
students completing year 9 of their schooling in Lulea in 1981 (Northern
Swedish Cohort) to answer questions about what they ate for breakfast.
After
27 years, the respondents underwent a health check where the presence
of metabolic syndrome and its various subcomponents was investigated,
researchers said.
The study showed that the young
people who neglected to eat breakfast or ate a poor breakfast had a 68
per cent higher incidence of metabolic syndrome as adults, compared with
those who had eaten more substantial breakfasts in their youth.
This
conclusion was drawn after taking into account socioeconomic factors
and other lifestyle habits of the adolescents in question, researchers
said.
Abdominal obesity and high levels of fasting
blood glucose levels were the subcomponents which, at adult age, could
be most clearly linked with poor breakfast in youth, they added.
“Further
studies are required for us to be able to understand the mechanisms
involved in the connection between poor breakfast and metabolic
syndrome, but our results and those of several previous studies suggest
that a poor breakfast can have a negative effect on blood sugar
regulation,” said Maria Wennberg, the study’s lead author.
The study was published in journal Public Health Nutrition.
Link for the article: http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/health/bad-breakfast-habits-in-youth-up-risk-of-metabolic-syndrome/article5634543.ece
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