
| Samuel Klein |
| Media Assistance:
Jim Dryden Assoc. Dir. of Broadcast Services jdryden@wustl.edu (314) 286-0110 |
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| Klein |
| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
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Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 16. - Show More |
| Toxic tummy Belly fat may drive inflammatory processes associated with disease (http://mednews.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/8947.html) March 8, 2007 --
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| Under the skin Hidden abdominal fat may pose greater health risks than visible body fat (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/12919730/site/newsweek/) May 24, 2006 -- A growing number of Americans are overweight or obese, but where they store those extra pounds may be as important as how many extra pounds they carry. Visceral fat, hidden inside the abdomen, has been linked to higher rates of various metabolic ailments, including diabetes and heart disease. |
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| Controlling the fat Researchers study effects of weight loss in adolescents (http://mednews.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/6929.html) April 3, 2006 -- A team of researchers at the School of Medicine is studying how fatty liver disease affects sugar and fat metabolism in overweight adolescents and how losing weight affects the condition. In the last 30 years, the number of overweight children has doubled in the United States, and overweight children are at increased risk for the problem. |
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| Fighting fat Weighing answers to obesity (http://magazine.wustl.edu/Winter05/SamuelKlein.htm) Jan. 26, 2006 --
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| 'Tis the season Preventing holiday weight gain is easier than losing extra pounds (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/10039210/site/newsweek/) Nov. 17, 2005 --
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Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 16. - Show More |
| Clips: |
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Showing Clips 1 through 3 of 17. - Show More |
| Study: When kids become teens, they get sluggish
Associated Press Online and 79 others July 16, 2008 -- One of the largest studies of its kind shows just how sluggish American children become once they hit the teen years: While 90 percent of 9-year-olds get a couple of hours of exercise most days, fewer than 3 percent of 15-year-olds do. WUSTL nutrition expert Samuel Klein, director of WUSTL medical school's Human Nutritioin Center, said the research provides a more powerful snapshot than previous studies. |
| Longevity quest moves slowly from lab to life
MSNBC.com and 2 others April 23, 2008 -- Human studies plus laboratory work with yeast, worms, flies and rodents are propelling scientists closer to understanding what causes aging, how to delay it -- and how to translate such progress from the lab to real life. One of the studies mentioned was the first calorie restriction clinical trials conducted by WUSTL and LSU. |
| Gut Check: Why Doctors Say Not All Fat Is Created Equal
The Wall Street Journal and 2 others April 15, 2008 -- The recent report that having a pot belly in your 40s roughly triples your risk of dementia in later life is just the tip of an ominous iceberg. WUSTL research on liposuction in which found no change in the women's cholesterol levels, triglycerides, insulin sensitivity or other health risks. "If they had lost that much fat by dieting, they would have substantially improved their metabolic profile, but they didn't," says Samuel Klein, director of WUSM's Center for Human Nutrition and the study's principal investigator. |
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