Obesity and the common cold

A study of children finds those who caught a particular virus were more likely to be obese

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Very overweight kids may be more likely to catch one particular cold virus, a new study finds.

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When you cough and sneeze, someone may tell you that you caught a cold. But often, what you really “caught” was a virus — a tiny organism that can spread infection. The drippy, stuffy, and uncomfortable symptoms of the common cold show up when a person is infected with a kind of virus.

In recent studies, scientists report that one kind of virus that causes the common cold may be connected to another dangerous health problem: Obesity. A person is obese if he or she has a lot of fat and is extremely overweight. Obesity has been linked to serious health risks such as heart disease. In other words, obesity can cause big problems.

For both children and adults, obesity is dangerous. Researchers say that obesity among children is an epidemic. An epidemic happens when many people get sick with a disease at the same time. Childhood obesity is called an epidemic because so many children are now extremely overweight.

Studies have shown that obese children are more likely to become obese adults, who are at higher risk for such major health problems as diabetes, heart disease and some kinds of cancer.

An illustration of adenovirus-36
This illustration shows adenovirus-36, a virus that cases the common cold. The virus may also trigger the body to make more fat cells. Russell Kightley/Photo Researchers Inc.
Poor nutrition and a lack of exercise can lead to obesity. But another, less obvious culprit could be a virus called adenovirus-36, which causes a cold. Within one group of children recently studied, those who had caught adenovirus-36 were more likely to be obese.

Jeffrey Schwimmer led the study. He is a pediatric gastroenterologist at the University of California, San Diego and at Rady Children’s Hospital San Diego. A pediatrician is a doctor who treats infants and children, and a gastroenterologist is a doctor who studies diseases in the parts of the body that food passes through, including the stomach and intestines.

Schwimmer and his team took blood samples from 67 obese children and 57 normal-weight children. The youngest children were eight and the oldest were 18. Schwimmer was looking for antibodies.

Antibodies are the human body’s way of fighting disease. When an infection begins in the body, the immune system fights back by creating antibodies that destroy the invaders. After the infection is gone, the antibodies remain in a person’s blood. This fact makes antibodies useful to researchers like Schwimmer. If he finds the adenovirus-36 antibodies in a blood sample, he knows the person was infected with the virus in the past.

The study showed that 19 of the children had the antibodies. Fifteen of those children were obese, and four were normal-weight. He also found that obese children with the antibodies were 35 pounds heavier, on average, than obese children without the antibodies.

This study is not the first time scientists have connected the virus to obesity. Other experiments have shown that many animals gain weight after infection by the virus, even though their eating and exercise habits don’t change. Laboratory experiments suggest that the virus can make the human body produce more fat cells.

Schwimmer says he’s found a connection, but it’s too early to know for certain if the adenovirus-36 virus actually causes obesity. “I don’t think we know enough to say, ‘Oh, if you get this virus you’re going to be obese,” he told Science News.

Stephen Ornes lives in Nashville, Tenn., and his family has two rabbits, six chickens and a cat. He has written for Science News Explores since 2008 on topics including lightning, feral pigs, big bubbles and space junk.

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