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Research Reveals One More Problem Caused By Childhood Obesity: Breathing Trouble During Surgery

Rack up one more problem that may follow in the wake of childhood obesity. Researchers at the University of Michigan Medical School have found that obese children have more problems than their normal rate cohorts with airway obstruction and other breathing trouble during surgical operations.

Obese children were found to have a higher rate of difficult mask ventilation, airway obstruction, major oxygen desaturation (a decrease in oxygen in the patient’s blood), and other airway problems. The study appears in the March issue of the journal Anesthesiology. “To our knowledge, this is the first study of its kind,” says lead author Alan R. Tait, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Anesthesiology at the U-M Health System. This large-scale prospective study examines the effect of overweight and obesity on the outcomes of operations in children undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery. “Based on current trends, it is likely that anesthesiologists will continue to care for an increasing number of children who are overweight or obese,” Tait says, “so it is vital that we are aware of the higher risk they face in the operating room.” Researchers studied the experiences of 2,025 children who were having elective surgery. Of those, 1,380 were normal weight, 351 were overweight and 294 were obese. Children ranged in age from 2 to 18 years old. In addition to the problems the obese patients experienced during surgery, they also had a higher rate of illnesses and conditions including asthma, hypertension, sleep apnea and Type II diabetes. These conditions all can contribute to problems during surgery, Tait notes. By the numbers:
  • An estimated 15 to 17 percent of children and adolescents in the United States are considered obese.
  • Major airway obstructions occurred in 19 percent of obese children, compared with 11 percent of normal-weight children.
  • Nearly 9 percent of obese children experienced difficult mask ventilation, compared with 2 percent of normal-weight children.
  • 17 percent of obese children in the study experienced major oxygen desaturation (decreased oxygen in the blood), compared with 9 percent of normal-weight children.
  • 28 percent of obese children had asthma, compared with 16 percent of normal-weight children.


It should be noted however, that despite the increased risk of adverse events among children who are obese, none resulted in significant illnesses.