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Popular Weight-Loss Drugs Could Be Harmful For Children: Researchers

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Popular Weight-Loss Drugs Could Be Harmful For Children: Researchers

Authored by Mary Gillis via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The potential lifelong consequences that weight-loss drugs could have on adolescents and children have a multidisciplinary team of clinicians, exercise and behavioral scientists, pharmacists, and ethics researchers at the University of California–Irvine (UCI) sounding alarms.

(Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The team’s pre-proof paper (pdf), published by the Journal of Clinical and Translational Science, suggests that swapping traditional methods like diet and exercise to tackle childhood obesity and Type 2 diabetes for GLP-1RA medications like Wegovy and Ozempic will likely lead to a host of unintended physical and emotional problems.

“Unlike in adults, children and adolescents need energy and sufficient calories not only for physical activity, but for growth and development,” Dr. Dan M. Cooper, associate director of the UCI Institute of Clinical and Translational Science and interim executive director of the UCI Institute for Precision Health, said in a news release.

While health experts applaud drug benefits like hunger suppression, low appetite, and slow gastric emptying in overweight, obese, or Type 2 diabetic adults, the paper’s authors argue these same benefits could backfire in younger groups.

Not getting enough calories can lead to nutritional deficiencies and put kids at risk of poor brain development, reduced learning ability, low immunity, increased infections, and—in some cases—death. Regular physical activity is necessary to improve cardiorespiratory fitness, build strong bones and muscles, control weight, reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression, and slash the risk of developing health conditions like heart disease, high blood pressure, and cancer.

Additionally, researchers say other possible harms should not be overlooked. Easy accessibility and availability could create a perfect storm for the potential of abuse among kids involved in sports with weight or body-type expectations, such as wrestling, martial arts, gymnastics, and ballet, as well as those with eating disorders.

“With the increase in social media, young people are already exposed to a diet culture and body images which may not be attainable and, ultimately, unhealthy,” said Jan D. Hirsch, one of the coauthors and the dean of the UCI School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, in the news release.

Another concern is the potential infiltration of illicit, unregulated copycat drugs in this age group.

What Are GLU-1RAs?

GLP-1RA stands for glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist. They are typically administered by shot injections on a daily or weekly basis, depending on the type. Pill forms are currently being developed and tested by pharmaceutical companies but are unavailable.

These drugs mimic the action of a hormone called glucagon-like peptide-1 by regulating the rise in blood sugar levels after a person eats and stimulating the body to produce more insulin. The extra insulin helps lower blood sugar levels, which helps control Type 2 diabetes. GLP-1RAs appear to curb hunger and slow the process of food digestion, making a person feel fuller longer with less food.

Lack of Children-Focused Studies

The prospective’s authors insist the cost versus benefit as it relates to long-term use in youth requires more careful study. Between an estimated 75 and 175 articles have been published per year on weight-loss drugs concerning all ages for the past decade, but only a fraction focus on adolescents and children. The overall number of published studies in 2022 was 175. Fewer than five centered on children.

“The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of certain GLP-1RAs … have been studied in both adult and pediatric populations; however, children are not miniature adults,” the paper reads. Navigating these new waters will require scientists to study dosing, formulations, and the interaction between drugs and lifestyle to “optimize safety, efficacy, and value during growth and development.”

Possible Unintended Consequences

Some of the adverse effects of trading conventional weight-loss strategies for GLP-1RA interventions the authors mention include the following:

  • Long-term growth and development impacts: The balance of calorie intake and expenditure regulates growth hormones, and the drug may interfere with this balance during critical growth stages.
  • Abuse of medication: Adolescents with eating disorders or participating in sports where certain weights offer advantages may abuse the drugs to gain a competitive edge.
  • Unwarranted and unsupervised use: Inaccurate body-weight perceptions may drive adolescents to unnecessarily and secretly use medications.
  • Improper prescriptions: Pediatricians may prescribe weight-loss drugs for convenient and short-term gains, but the long-term effects on growth and development are largely unknown.
  • Warped cost–benefit analysis for long-term use: Patients may be compelled to be lifelong users; long-term use may be cost-prohibitive; and off-label use may not be covered by insurers.

Read more here…

Tyler Durden
Sat, 09/02/2023 – 10:30

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