Korean J Pediatr.  2006 Jun;49(6):617-622. 10.3345/kjp.2006.49.6.617.

Serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein levels in obese middle school boys

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Konyang University, Daejeon, Korea. kcm1000@kyuh.co.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: High-Sensitivity C-reactive protein(hs-CRP) has been recognized as a very useful and sensitive predictor of the future risk of myocardial infarction. But the clinical significance of hs-CRP in children remains uncertain. To confirm the existence of obesity-induced vascular inflammation and the association between metabolic syndromes and elevation of CRP in children, we investigated the relationship among CRP, obesity, blood pressure(BP), and serum lipids in schoolboys.
METHODS
Twenty-eight obese(BMI 29.61+/-3.29 kg/m2) and 93 non-obese(BMI 18.99+/-2.21 kg/m2) boys aged 14 years were examined. Serum CRP levels was measured by the high sensitive latex turbidimetric immunoassay and subjects with CRP levels below 0.3 mg/dL were adopted to avoid the influence of acute infection.
RESULTS
Obese children had significantly higher hs-CRP levels than their non-obese group(0.104+/-0.075 vs. 0.054+/-0.005 mg/dL). In the obese group, BMI, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, apolipoprotein B, atherogenic index, and triglyceride were significantly higher than in non-obese. The BMI, diastolic blood pressure, apolipoprotein E, atherognic index, and triglyceride showed positive correlation with log CRP by simple regression. Multiple regression analysis indicated that BMI and apolipoprotein E were strongly related to CRP.
CONCLUSION
This study revealed that obese children tended to have higher levels of serum hs-CRP, BP elevation and dyslipidemia than the control group and that BMI and apolipoprotein E were strongly related to CRP. These results indicate that obesity related metabolic syndrome can be developed in children.

Keyword

Obesity; hs-CRP; Metabolic syndrome

MeSH Terms

Apolipoproteins
Blood Pressure
C-Reactive Protein*
Child
Dyslipidemias
Humans
Immunoassay
Inflammation
Latex
Myocardial Infarction
Obesity
Triglycerides
Apolipoproteins
C-Reactive Protein
Latex
Full Text Links
  • KJP
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr