Obesity in childhood and puberty linked to higher risk of blood clots in later life
According to a new study by the University of Gothenburg, being overweight during childhood and early adulthood increases the risk of developing blood clots in later years. The study analysed the health data of 37,000 men and their early body mass index (BMI) and any blood clots that developed as they got older. The researchers found that both overweight in childhood and overweight in young adulthood increased the risk of venous blood clots later in life, with overweight in young adulthood proving to be a more influential factor than childhood overweight. While most blood clots occur in the legs and are not dangerous, they can become life-threatening if they travel to the lungs and cause a pulmonary embolism.
The link between obesity and blood clots is already well known, but the impact of a higher BMI in childhood on the risk was unclear. The researchers examined the data of a large group of men in Sweden who were born between 1945 and 1961, looking at school records at age 8 and Armed Forces medical examinations at age 20 to establish BMI data. They then looked at blood clot data on the men up to an average age of 62.
The study found that BMI at both age 8 and age 20 can be linked to blood clots independently of each other. As adults, the researchers found that two groups were more at risk – those who had been overweight both as a child and in early adulthood, and those with a normal weight in childhood but who became overweight in early adulthood. In addition, the study found that carrying excess weight in both childhood and early adulthood increased a person’s risk of arterial thrombi, which are clots that result from constricted blood vessels with fatty deposits. However, the researchers noted that more research is needed in this area as they only found a small number of cases.
The study’s senior authors emphasised that obesity and overweight during puberty seem to have a marked impact on a person’s future risks of venous thrombi. The study has been published in the Journal of Internal Medicine.