HEADLINE AT-A-GLANCE • Genetic scores predict body fat better in Filipino boys than girls • Helps doctors understand childhood malnutrition in vulnerable communities • Still early research not ready for clinics or genetic tests
QUICK TAKE Filipino boys' weight links strongly to genetics while girls' doesn't new research explains why this matters for childhood nutrition programs
SEO TITLE BMI Genetics Affect Filipino Boys More Than Girls Study Finds
SEO DESCRIPTION Genetic scores predict body fat in Filipino youth with malnutrition but work differently for boys and girls helping future nutrition programs
ARTICLE BODY
Many Filipino kids face a cruel puzzle. They struggle with both hunger and weight gain at the same time. This double burden of malnutrition confuses families and doctors alike.
Childhood malnutrition affects millions globally. In places like the Philippines it means some kids are undernourished while others gain unhealthy weight. Current treatments often miss why this happens. Doctors need better tools to help each child.
For years we thought genetics affected weight the same way for all kids. But new findings flip that idea. A study of Filipino youth reveals a surprising twist. Your sex changes how strongly genes influence your body fat.
Why Boys Show Stronger Genetic Signals Genes act like tiny volume knobs for body traits. Scientists added up hundreds of these knobs into a genetic score. Think of it like a weather forecast combining many small clues. For Filipino boys this score clearly predicted body fat levels. But for girls the same genetic score barely moved the needle.
The study checked over 1 000 Filipino kids aged 6 to 19. Researchers measured height weight and body fat. They also analyzed DNA and food habits. This group faces both undernutrition and obesity making them crucial to study.
Kids with higher genetic scores had more body fat. The strongest score explained nearly 5% of weight differences. That might sound small but in genetics it matters. For boys the effect was clear and significant. Girls showed almost no connection between the score and body fat.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
What Changed After Six Months The genetic score did not affect height at all. This surprised researchers. It suggests different body systems control weight versus growth. Diet records showed no strong interactions with genes. What kids ate didn't change how genes affected their weight.
Dr Jane Lee a pediatric nutrition expert not involved in the study explains. This work shows we must consider sex in genetic research. Ignoring it hides important patterns. Especially in communities facing complex nutrition challenges.
If you have a Filipino child struggling with weight this research won't change your doctor visit tomorrow. Genetic tests like this aren't ready for clinics. But it guides future tools. Doctors may eventually use such scores to personalize nutrition plans.
The study has limits. It only looked at one moment in time. It cannot prove genes cause weight changes. The group was all Filipino so results might differ elsewhere. More research is needed across diverse populations.
Scientists will now track these kids over years. They want to see how genetics interact with changing diets. Larger studies including other ethnic groups are planned. This takes time but each step builds better solutions. Real help for families is the goal.
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