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The guidelines say that cholesterol drugs likely would be recommended for less than 1 percent of kids tested, and they shouldn't be used in children younger than 10 unless they have severe problems. "We'll also continue to encourage parents and children to make positive lifestyle choices to prevent risk factors from occurring," steps such as diet and exercise, said Dr. Gordan Tomaselli, president of the American Heart Association. The group praised the guidelines and will host a presentation on them Sunday at its annual conference in Florida. Cholesterol tests cost around $80 and usually are covered by health insurance. Several of the 14 doctors on the guidelines panel have received consulting fees or have had other financial ties to makers of cholesterol medicines. Typically, cholesterol drugs are used indefinitely but they are generally safe, said Dr. Sarah Blumenschein, director of preventive cardiology at Children's Medical Center in Dallas, who had no role in the guidelines but supports them. "You have to start early. It's much easier to change children's behavior when they're 5 or 10 or 12" than when they're older, she said. The guidelines also say doctors should: Take yearly blood pressure measurements for children starting at age 3. Start routine anti-smoking advice when kids are ages 5 to 9, and counsel parents of infants not to smoke in the home. Review infants' family history of obesity and start tracking body mass index, or BMI, a measure of obesity, at age 2. The panel also suggests using more frank terms for kids who are overweight and obese than some government agencies have used in the past. Children whose BMI is in the 85th to 95th percentile should be called overweight, not "at risk for overweight," and kids whose BMI is in the 95th percentile or higher should be called obese, not "overweight
-- even kids as young as age 2, the panel said. "Some might feel that `obese' is an unacceptable term for children and parents," so doctors should "use descriptive terminology that is appropriate for each child and family," the guidelines recommend. They were released online Friday by the journal Pediatrics. ___ Online: Guidelines: http://tinyurl.com/7csojas NHLBI panel: Cholesterol info: http://tinyurl.com/23dtxvo
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/
cvd_ped/index.htm
and
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/
heart/index.htm#chol
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