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1.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association of fatness in children with dyslipoproteinemia and high blood pressure, with the purpose of proposing standards for childhood obesity which are directly related to intermediate biological parameters that predict future disease. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study of a large, nationally representative sample of Australian schoolchildren. SUBJECTS: 1834 children aged 9 or 15 years, with skinfolds blood lipid measurements on 1144 and with skinfolds and blood pressure measurements on 1757. MEASUREMENTS: Skinfolds thicknesses measured at four locations (triceps, biceps, subscapular and suprailiac) using holtain calipers, percent body fat calculated from the sum of four skinfolds, Quetelet's index calculated from weight and height, waist and hip circumferences, plasma total cholesterol and triglycerides determined using a Technicon Autoanalyser II, high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC) analysed following precipitation with heparin manganese, and systolic blood pressure (SBP) measured using a standard mercury sphygmomanometer. RESULTS: For 9 years old girls, 15 year old girls and 9 years old boys, dichotomising their HDLC and SBP measurements by percent body fat defined the two groups most homogeneous in terms of a measure of within-group variation. The cut-points in percent body fat were in the ranges 29-35% (girls) and 17-20% (boys). CONCLUSION: It is feasible to use the current biomedical status of individual children to define criteria for obesity. A cut-off point of 30% body mass as fat for girls and 20% for boys appears to be an appropriate standard.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: Intra-abdominal adipose tissue (IAAT) is associated with the metabolic complications of obesity. However the time course for the development of IAAT is not clearly defined because it is generally difficult to measure directly. The purposes of this short communication are to present data supporting the existence of IAAT in young children using direct measurement with computed tomography imaging, and to examine the relationship between IAAT and anthropometric indices in 16 healthy children (6.4 +/- 1.2 years; 24.8 +/- 5.4 kg). DESIGN: Total body fat (6.4 +/- 3.5 kg) and fat free mass (18.4 +/- 3.6 kg) were determined by bioelectrical resistance. Fat distribution was estimated from eight individual skinfold measurements, the ratio of three trunk skinfolds to three extremity skinfolds (0.78 +/- 0.20), and the waist:hip ratio (0.90 +/- 0.08). RESULTS: Mean abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (SCAT) was 65.3 +/- 44.8 cm2, and mean IAAT was 8.3 +/- 5.8 cm2. The ratio of IAAT to SCAT was 0.15 +/- 0.08, and the ratio of IAAT to total body fat was 1.44 +/- 0.84 cm2/kg. IAAT was significantly correlated with body weight (r = 0.54; P = 0.03), all skinfold measures (range r = 0.60-0.78; P = 0.02 to 0.0003) except at the calf, fat mass (r = 0.69; P = 0.003), and the trunk to extremity skinfold ratio (r = 0.78; P = 0.0003). There was no significant correlation between IAAT and the waist:hip ratio (r = 0.21). CONCLUSIONS: These preliminary results establish the existence of IAAT in young children and suggest that individual trunk skinfold measurements and the trunk:extremity skinfold ratio provide a better indication of IAAT compared to the waist:hip ratio. However, as with adults, the relationship between intra-abdominal adipose tissue and anthropometry in children is complex.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the patterns of growth, nutritional status, body composition, and resting energy expenditure (REE) in prepubertal children with Alagille syndrome (AGS) before the onset of end-stage liver disease. STUDY DESIGN: Thirteen prepubertal subjects with AGS (8 male; mean age, 6.8 2.8 years) were evaluated for growth parameters, body composition by skinfolds and by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, and REE by indirect calorimetry. The children with AGS were compared with a healthy, age-matched reference group of 37 prepubertal children. RESULTS: Compared with healthy children, children with AGS had significantly reduced (P <. 05) growth (weight, weight z score, height, height z score), nutritional status (midarm circumference, triceps skinfold, and midarm muscle area), and body composition (fat mass and fat-free mass). Subscapular thickness, percent body fat, and REE were not different. The AGS subgroup (n = 4) with REE greater than 110% predicted value had a reduced percent body fat (P <.02). CONCLUSIONS: Growth and body composition abnormalities are common in prepubertal children with AGS.  相似文献   

4.
Children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) typically gain weight at excessive rates during and after therapy, and a high proportion of young adult survivors are obese. Previous studies have failed to identify the abnormalities in energy balance that predispose these children to obesity. The aim of this study was to determine the cause of excess weight gain in children treated for ALL by testing the hypothesis that energy expenditure is reduced in these patients. Twenty children [9 boys, 11 girls; mean age 10.9 (3.2) y] treated for ALL who had shown excess weight gain, but were not obese [mean body mass index SD score 0.70 (1.04)], were closely and individually matched with 20 healthy control children [9 boys, 11 girls; mean age 10.7 (3.0) y; mean body mass index SD score 0.27 (0.91)]. In each child we measured total energy expenditure by doubly-labeled water method, resting energy expenditure, energy expended on habitual physical activity, and energy intake. Total energy expenditure was significantly higher in control subjects than in patients: mean paired difference 1185 kJ/d (282 kcal/d), 95% confidence interval (CI) 218-2152. This difference was largely due to reduced energy expended on habitual physical activity in the patients. Resting energy expenditure was lower in the patients: mean paired difference 321 kJ/d (76 kcal/d), 95% CI 100-541. Energy intake was also lower in the patients: mean paired difference 1001 kJ/d (238 kcal/d), 95% CI 93-1909. Children treated for ALL are predisposed to excess weight gain, and subsequently obesity, by reduced total energy expenditure secondary to reduced habitual physical activity. Prevention of obesity in ALL should focus on modest increases in habitual physical activity, modest restriction of dietary intake, and monitoring of excess weight gain.  相似文献   

5.
Approximately 10% of children are obese. Twin and adoption studies demonstrate a large genetic component to obesity, especially in adults. However, the increasing prevalence of obesity over the last 20 years can only be explained by environmental factors. In most obese individuals, no measurable differences in metabolism can be detected. Few children engage in regular physical activity. Obese children and adults uniformly underreport the amount of food they eat. Obesity is particularly related to increased consumption of high-fat foods. BMI is a quick and easy way to screen for childhood obesity. Treating childhood obesity relies on positive family support and lifestyle changes involving the whole family. Food preferences are influenced early by parental eating habits, and when developed in childhood, they tend to remain fairly constant into adulthood. Children learn to be active or inactive from their parents. In addition, physical activity (or more commonly, physical inactivity) habits that are established in childhood tend to persist into adulthood. Weight loss is usually followed by changes in appetite and metabolism, predisposing individuals to regain their weight. However, when the right family dynamics exist--a motivated child with supportive parents--long-term success is possible.  相似文献   

6.
In a transversal study, we assessed the changes of body composition, body weight gain, skinfold thickness and the distribution of body fat during pregnancy in 181 healthy pregnant women in Zagreb. Weight gain in pregnant women was 14.4 kg on average, out of which 5.7 kg was the total increase in body fat. In healthy pregnant women the weight gain of more than 12 kg causes excessive accumulation of body fat and has no effect on the weight of placenta and newborn. There is no significant correlation between the body weight gain of pregnant women and the weight of newborns. The increase in skinfold thickness is neither proportional nor simultaneous. Changes in biceps and triceps skinfolds indicate the dependency on the level of estrogen, and subscapular and suprailiac skinfolds on the level of progesterone in the blood of pregnant women. The index of centripetal fat pattern decreases significantly in pregnancy and is referred to peripheral redistribution of body fat in regular pregnancy. The expected weight of the newborn (eBW) may be determined by the body mass index (BMI) and triceps skinfold thickness.  相似文献   

7.
The role that energy expenditure plays in pediatric obesity was somewhat confused by early research purporting to show that, as a group, obese children have lower energy intakes than do lean children. On the basis of this intake data, the conclusion was drawn that obese persons are somehow energy efficient, leading to weight gain. More recent research examining energy expenditure has shown clearly that, as a group, obese children have higher energy expenditures than do their lean counterparts. With the advent of the doubly labeled water method for determining free-living energy expenditure, it has been shown that obese children underreport intake significantly more than do lean children. When measurements are properly adjusted for differences in body size, there are generally no major differences in energy expenditure between lean and obese groups. However, in some cross-sectional studies, a low level of physical activity has been shown to be related to current body fatness. In addition, longitudinal studies have shown that a low level of energy expenditure, particularly energy expended in physical activity, is associated with both body fatness and weight gain.  相似文献   

8.
Predicting obesity in young adulthood from childhood and parental obesity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity increases the risk of obesity in adulthood, but how parental obesity affects the chances of a child's becoming an obese adult is unknown. We investigated the risk of obesity in young adulthood associated with both obesity in childhood and obesity in one or both parents. METHODS: Height and weight measurements were abstracted from the records of 854 subjects born at a health maintenance organization in Washington State between 1965 and 1971. Their parents' medical records were also reviewed. Childhood obesity was defined as a body-mass index at or above the 85th percentile for age and sex, and obesity in adulthood as a mean body-mass index at or above 27.8 for men and 27.3 for women. RESULTS: In young adulthood (defined as 21 to 29 years of age), 135 subjects (16 percent) were obese. Among those who were obese during childhood, the chance of obesity in adulthood ranged from 8 percent for 1- or 2-year-olds without obese parents to 79 percent for 10-to-14-year-olds with at least one obese parent. After adjustment for parental obesity, the odds ratios for obesity in adulthood associated with childhood obesity ranged from 1.3 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.6 to 3.0) for obesity at 1 or 2 years of age to 17.5 (7.7 to 39.5) for obesity at 15 to 17 years of age. After adjustment for the child's obesity status, the odds ratios for obesity in adulthood associated with having one obese parent ranged from 2.2 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.1 to 4.3) at 15 to 17 years of age to 3.2 (1.8 to 5.7) at 1 or 2 years of age. CONCLUSIONS: Obese children under three years of age without obese parents are at low risk for obesity in adulthood, but among older children, obesity is an increasingly important predictor of adult obesity, regardless of whether the parents are obese. Parental obesity more than doubles the risk of adult obesity among both obese and nonobese children under 10 years of age.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: To compare skinfold thickness measurements with bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) as a measure of body fat for use in a survey of children (the National Study of Health and Growth). DESIGN: Part cross-sectional, part repeated measurement study. SETTING: A junior school in Bath. SUBJECTS: 42 boys and 33 girls aged from 9 to 11 years. INTERVENTIONS: Measurements of BIA, height, weight, and triceps, biceps, subscapular and suprailiac skinfolds. RESULTS: All measurements were highly repeatable with intraclass correlation coefficients > 0.90. The level of agreement between estimates of percentage of body fat derived from prediction equations based on impedance or skinfold measurements respectively was poor: the mean difference (impedance estimate minus skinfold estimate) was 4.67% (95% range -3.47 to 12.82) for boys and 7.81% (95% range 1.27 to 14.34) for girls. The two estimates were found to correlate highly (r = 0.83 for boys and r = 0.81 for girls) because weight, used to convert estimates of fat-free mass derived from impedance to fat mass, was highly correlated with impedance and moderately highly correlated with skinfold thicknesses. The correlations of resistance (R) and (H)2/R with skinfold thicknesses were very low. There was a moderate correlation of R and H2/R with log(weight-for-height index), but lower than that of log(weight-for-height index) with each of the skinfolds. CONCLUSIONS: As currently available equations for converting impedance-based estimates of total body water to fat mass are not fully developed for use in children of varying ages, estimates of body fat calculated from skinfold thickness measurements remain preferable in epidemiological studies of children's health and growth.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: To determine subsequent growth and body composition of children born to women with type 1 diabetes compared with controls. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Follow-up of offspring born to women with type 1 diabetes and controls from an earlier study of diabetes and lactation. SUBJECTS: Seventeen nondiabetic offspring of women with type 1 diabetes and 18 offspring of control women (age range 5.9 to 9.0 years). OUTCOME MEASURES: Anthropometric measures at follow-up included height, weight, triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness. Information on usual nutrient intakes and physical activity patterns was elicited through questionnaires. Body composition was determined from skinfold thickness measures and bioelectrical impedance analysis. A child was identified as obese if he or she met at least 2 of the following 4 criteria for obesity: (1) weight-for-height equal to or greater than 120% of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) reference median plus triceps skinfold greater than the 85th percentile; (2) body mass index (BMI) greater than the 95th percentile for age and sex; (3) percent body fat (from impedance measures) equal to or greater than 25 for boys and 30 for girls; or (4) percent body fat (from sum of skinfold measures) equal to or greater than 25 for boys and 30 for girls. RESULTS: There were 7 obese children in the type 1 diabetes group and none in the control group (p = 0.007). Obese children did not differ from nonobese children in birth weight, body fat patterning, nutrient intake, physical activity patterns, maternal pregravid weight or blood glucose control during the last trimester of pregnancy. Mothers of obese children, however, had fewer years of education and gained more weight during pregnancy compared with mothers of nonobese children in the type 1 diabetes group (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Obesity during childhood is a significant problem among nondiabetic children of women with type 1 diabetes. The association of childhood obesity with lower maternal education and excessive pregnancy weight gain warrants further investigation.  相似文献   

11.
Physical fitness, participation in physical activity, fundamental motor skills and body composition are important contributors to the health and the development of a healthy lifestyle among children and youth. The New South Wales Schools Fitness and Physical Activity Survey, 1997, was conducted to fill some of the gaps in our knowledge of these aspects of the lives of young people in New South Wales. The survey was conducted in February and March, 1997 and collected data on a randomly-selected sample of students (n = 5518) in Years 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Measures were taken on body composition (height and weight, waist and hip girths, skinfolds), health-related fitness (aerobic capacity, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility), fundamental motor skills (run, vertical jump, catch, overhand throw, forehand strike and kick), self-reported physical activity, time spent in sedentary recreation, and physical education (PE) classes. The methods are described to assist in the development of surveys of other populations and to provoke debate relevant to the development and dissemination of standard approaches to monitoring the fitness, physical activity habits and body composition of Australian children and youth. Finally, we offer comments on some of the strengths and limitations of the methods employed.  相似文献   

12.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between asthma and obesity in children and adolescents. DESIGN: Medical record review. SETTING: Urban community health center. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred seventy-one children aged 4 to 16 years, 85 with asthma and 86 nonasthmatic controls. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Diagnosis of asthma, age, and sex-adjusted body mass index (weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters). RESULTS: Seventy-eight percent of the sample was Hispanic, 17% was African American, 2% were white, and 3% were other minorities. There were significantly more children with asthma (30.6%) who were very obese (> or =95th body mass index percentile) compared with controls (11.6%) (P=.004). Children with asthma were also significantly more overweight than controls (mean+/-SD, 22.5%+/-28.3% vs 12.0%+/-19.6% overweight; P=.004). The difference in obesity between children with asthma and controls was significant for both sexes and across the 4.5 to 10.9 years and 11 to 16 years age groups. Asthma severity was not related to obesity. CONCLUSION: Asthma is a risk factor for obesity in children and adolescents.  相似文献   

13.
Preventing childhood obesity has become a top priority in efforts to improve our nation's public health. Although much research is needed to address this health crisis, it is important to approach childhood obesity with an understanding of the social stigma that obese youths face, which is pervasive and can have serious consequences for emotional and physical health. This report reviews existing research on weight stigma in children and adolescents, with attention to the nature and extent of weight bias toward obese youths and to the primary sources of stigma in their lives, including peers, educators, and parents. The authors also examine the literature on psychosocial and physical health consequences of childhood obesity to illustrate the role that weight stigma may play in mediating negative health outcomes. The authors then review stigma-reduction efforts that have been tested to improve attitudes toward obese children, and they highlight complex questions about the role of weight bias in childhood obesity prevention. With these literatures assembled, areas of research are outlined to guide efforts on weight stigma in youths, with an emphasis on the importance of studying the effect of weight stigma on physical health outcomes and identifying effective interventions to improve attitudes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

14.
Examined whether: (a) societal directives to be thin are perceived among children, (b) discontent with body and attitudes and behaviors associated with eating disorders begin before adolescence, and (c) these differ by sex. These issues were assessed in 239 Grade 3 students. Scales of eating and weight attitudes and behaviors for this under-studied population were either created or modified from existing instruments. These 8- to 10-year-old children expressed weight, dieting, and physique concerns that reflect Western sociocultural values and preoccupation with body weight and dieting. Sex differences were examined and revealed several but not very reliable distinctions at this young age. These findings appear to be consistent with research on adolescents. The components that may lead to the development of an eating disorder or disregulated-restrained eating in a vulnerable adolescent may be both internalized and expressed at a very early age.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the clinical utility of a new age-adjusted measure of body fat distribution (based on waist and hip circumferences) and stature, in relation to biochemical complications in obese children. DESIGN: Cross-sectional, clinical study. The formula to calculate the common standard deviation score (SDS) of waist-to-hip ratio/height (WHR/Ht) was obtained from the data of control children. The relationship between WHR/Ht SDS, as the age-adjusted measure, in obese children and their clinical laboratory data was evaluated. SUBJECTS: Outpatient obese Japanese children (102 boys and 75 girls) and control children (508 boys and 549 girls), ranging in age from 6-15 y. MEASUREMENTS: Height, body weight, waist girth, hip girth, triceps and subscapular skinfold thicknesses, as anthropometric measures. Percent overweight, percent body fat, waist girth, WHR and WHR/Ht SDS as criteria for obesity. Clinical laboratory analyses for fasting blood samples of obese children. RESULTS: The WHR/Ht SDS closely correlated with age in obese children, thus reflecting the progress of abdominal obesity during growth. The obese boys were more hyperlipidaemic than the girls were, although the percent overweight was similar in both genders. The percent overweight, percent body fat, waist girth and WHR/Ht SDS all correlated well with triglyceride (TG), alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and insulin in boys, whereas only waist girth and WHR/Ht SDS showed a close correlation with TG and insulin in girls. The obese subjects were subdivided according to the number of abnormal values observed in TG, ALT and insulin. For obese boys, all five indices of obesity were higher in the groups with complications than in the group without. In the girls, only the WHR/Ht SDS constantly differed between subgroups. WHR/Ht SDS most obviously distinguished the groups with complications from the other group with a wide margin of difference (2-fold in boys and > 2-fold in girls) in the mean values. CONCLUSION: The WHR/Ht SDS can serve as an index predicting the occurrence of biochemical complications in obese children ranging from the age of 6-15 y.  相似文献   

16.
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to assess the familial aggregation of lipid levels in schoolchildren of Cuenca city, Spain. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A cross sectional study was made including 307 both sexes schoolchildren 9-12 years old recruited in three schools of Cuenca city, and 346 of their parents. Sociodemographics variables, weight, height, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure and fasting plasma total cholesterol, LDL-C, HDL-C and triglyceride concentrations were determined. RESULTS: Father-daughter and mother-daughter Spearman rank correlations coefficients in total cholesterol and LDL-C levels showed values ranging from 0.34 to 0.42 (p < 0.01). Correlation coefficients between both parents and between parents and sons were not significant. By stepwise multiple regression analysis it was found that parents' total cholesterol levels explained almost 30% of cholesterol variability in daughters and 10% in sons. This proportion was about 25% for LDL-C in daughters and was not significant in sons. Parent-children aggregation of HLD-C and triglycerides was weak. CONCLUSIONS: Parent-daughter aggregation of lipid and lipoprotein levels was stronger than parent-son, which has been evidenced mainly in total cholesterol and LDL-C. It has been found no evidence of relation between parents.  相似文献   

17.
In the city of Esmeraldas, north-western coast of Ecuador, height, weight, and body composition of 600 male and female schoolchildren of African ancestry in the age groups four, five and six years were investigated. All the children were apparently healthy without any obvious or reported pathologies and in accordance with data from personal information were assigned to one of two socio-economic classes. The greater values for weight and height shown by children in the higher socio-economic group than in the less well off are compatible with those for more fat and water as obtained by the BIA investigation. Additional information on nutritional, muscular and general health status was obtained from positioning and degree of dispersion of the 'Biagram' ellipses. It seems that both the anthropometric and the bioelectrical impedance methods provide useful information on the differences due to belonging to one or other of the socio-economic groups.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: Studying gender differences in fat mass and distribution in a homogeneous group of children. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SUBJECTS: 610 children aged 5-7 y in Kiel, Germany. METHODS: Anthropometric measures, bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). RESULTS: Although boys had increased body weights (P<0.05), body mass indexes (BMI's) (P<0.001) and waist/hip ratios (WHRs) (P<0.001), the %fat mass as assessed by BIA (P<0.05) was increased in girls. Although the increased BMI in boys was independent of the percentile used, gender differences (that is, lower values for boys than for girls at the same age) in WHR, the sum of four skinfolds and %fat were seen up to the 90th percentile. By contrast, above the 90th percentile there were no differences in skinfold thickness and %fat between boys and girls. Studying 42 BMI-matched pairs (boys and girls) also showed that the %fat estimated by BIA (P<0.001) was increased in girls. Plotting the average of %fat as obtained from skinfold- and BAI-measurements against the difference between data obtained by the use of the two methods shows that BIA %fat overestimates skinfold %fat at low or normal percent fat mass (that is, up to 20%) in both genders. By contrast, at increased fat mass, BIA %fat seems to underestimate skinfold %fat in both genders. CONCLUSIONS: Gender differences in fat mass and fat distribution are obvious in children aged 5-7 y. These differences are independent of gender differences in body weight. However, the nutritional state has an influence and gender differences cannot be detected in overweight and obese children. Our data also suggest that a children-specific formula used to calculate %fat from skinfold measurements is inappropriate.  相似文献   

19.
Examines the psychology and physiology of obesity, its assessment and treatment, the role of exercise in weight reduction, and new directions for the field. The health risks of obesity are discussed, particularly the controversy about weight reduction for persons less than 30% overweight. Several physiological factors are presented, including the set point theory of body weight regulation, the role of fat cell size and number, and dietary influences on body weight. Assessment issues are noted along with results from treatment programs for obese children and adults. The role of exercise is emphasized, not only because of increased energy expenditure, but also because exercise may suppress appetite, offset the decline in basal metabolic rate caused by dieting, minimize loss of lean body mass, and counteract the ill effects of obesity. Two problems in the field are raised: the misinterpretation of the strengths of behavior therapy and the trap of focusing on long-term results. New directions are urged, including aggressive approaches to dieting, treatment combinations, and the use of social support. (5 p ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

20.
This paper examines treatment alternatives for children and adolescents as a function of degree of obesity. Treatment for mild obesity (20-40% overweight) should be preventive, emphasizing long-term changes in eating and activity patterns with the goal of weight maintenance and relative weight reduction. Short-term behaviour modification programmes, which include parental support, are effective in achieving these goals. Outpatient clinics or schools where social support is available are appropriate treatment settings. More comprehensive behavioural programmes are needed for treating moderate obesity (41-100% overweight). Such programmes include extended treatment periods, depositrefund contracts, direct parental involvement, and increased emphasis on lifestyle exercise. Outpatient clinics and schools remain optimal treatment settings, but more research is needed on camp settings. Radical treatments such as surgery, drugs, and very low calorie diets cannot be recommended for moderate childhood obesity. Severe obesity (> 100% overweight) requires consideration of radical interventions, and evidence to date supports the experimental use of very low calorie diets (protein-sparing modified fasts) together with behaviour modification. Such dietary treatment must be conducted in hospitals under strict medical supervision. Neither drugs nor surgery can be recommended for severe obesity in children and adolescents. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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