A UCSF researcher
has determined that a key reason for the epidemic
of pediatric obesity, now the most commonly diagnosed
childhood ailment, is that high-calorie, low-fiber
Western diets promote hormonal imbalances that
encourage children to overeeat.
In
a comprehensive review of obesity research published
in the August edition of the journal Nature
Clinical Practice Endocrinology & Metabolism,
Robert Lustig, MD, professor of clinical pediatrics
at UCSF Children's Hospital, says that food
manufacturing practices have created a "toxic
environment" that dooms children to being
overweight.
"It will take acknowledgement
of the concepts of biological susceptibility and
societal accountability and de-emphasis of the
concept of personal responsibility to make a difference
in the lives of children," Lustig says.
According to the National
Institutes of Health, the number of children who
are overweight in the United States has doubled
during the past three decades. Currently one child
in five is overweight. The increase is true for
children and adolescents of all age groups and
races and for boys and girls.
Diseases that once were only
seen in adults, like type 2 diabetes, now are
occurring in increasing numbers in children, according
to Lustig. Overweight children tend to become
overweight adults, which also puts them at greater
risk of high blood pressure, heart disease, and
stroke. Children who are obese also are socially
ostracized and teased, putting them at risk for
depression and other psychiatric conditions, he
adds.
"Our current Western
food environment has become highly 'insulinogenic,'"
Lustig says, "as demonstrated by its increased
energy density, high-fat content, high glycemic
index, increased fructose composition, decreased
fiber, and decreased dairy content."
"In particular, fructose
(too much) and fiber (not enough) appear to be
cornerstones of the obesity epidemic through their
effects on insulin," he adds.
Lustig says that it has long
been known that the hormone insulin acts on the
brain to encourage eating through two separate
mechanisms. First, it blocks the signals that
travel from the body's fat stores to the brain
by suppressing the effectiveness of the hormone
leptin, resulting in increased food intake and
decreased activity. Second, insulin promotes the
signal that seeks the reward of eating carried
by the chemical dopamine, which makes a person
want to eat to get the pleasurable dopamine "rush."
Calorie intake and expenditure
normally are regulated by leptin, Lustig says.
When leptin is functioning properly it "increases
physical activity, decreases appetite, and increases
feelings of well-being." Conversely, when
leptin is suppressed, feelings of well-being and
activity decrease and appetite increases -- a
state called "leptin resistance."
Changes in food processing
during the past 30 years, particularly the addition
of sugar to a wide variety of foods that once
never included sugar and the removal of fiber,
both of which promote insulin production, have
created an environment in which our foods are
essentially addictive, he adds.
Lustig also notes that children
cannot be blamed or expected to take personal
responsibility for their dietary behavior in an
environment when the foods they are offered --
especially cheaply prepared "fast foods"
that are full of sugar and devoid of fiber --
are toxic.
"The concept of personal
responsibility is not tenable in children. No
child chooses to be obese," he says. "Furthermore,
young children are not responsible for food choices
at home or at school, and it can hardly be said
that preschool children, in whom obesity is rampant,
are in a position to accept personal responsibility."
"If we don't fix this,
our children will continue to lose," he emphasizes.
One of the nation's top children's
hospitals, UCSF Children's Hospital creates a
healing environment where children and their families
find compassionate care at the edge of scientific
discovery, with more than 150 experts in 50 medical
specialties serving patients throughout Northern
California and beyond.
UCSF is a leading university
that consistently defines health care worldwide
by conducting advanced biomedical research, educating
graduate students in the life sciences, and providing
complex patient care.