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Review finds reversible heart changes in children taking certain steroid medications

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Review finds reversible heart changes in children taking certain steroid medications
Photo by Vitaly Gariev / Unsplash

Researchers reviewed existing studies on how steroid medications called glucocorticoids might affect the hearts of children and adolescents. These medications are used for various conditions. The review did not involve a new study with a specific number of patients, but instead gathered and analyzed information from past research.

The main finding was that in very young babies, these steroids can cause a temporary thickening of the heart muscle, which appears to go away. In older children, the evidence for permanent heart damage is sparse and hard to separate from the effects of their underlying illness. More sensitive heart tests can sometimes show very mild changes in function that aren't obvious otherwise.

It's important to know this review found no clear proof that these childhood medications cause serious heart problems like heart failure later in life. The link to later heart disease is still a theory based on indirect risk factors. The results are based on limited and sometimes unclear evidence from past studies. This means doctors and families should be aware of the possibility of heart effects, but not assume serious damage is certain.

What this means for you:
Steroids may cause temporary heart changes in infants; evidence for lasting damage in kids is limited.
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