Hyperactive Girls May Face Grown-Up Health Challenges
She’s always restless, can’t sit
still, chatters nonstop, and has
little self-control. That’s the
definition of “hyperactive,”
according to parents in one study.
Twenty-one years later, their
hyperactive daughters were more
likely than other women to have
thickened arteries—and about
a 20% greater risk for heart
attack or stroke.
Why might hyperactivity in girlhood be linked to heart risks later? After all, “being active” can help prevent heart disease. So you’d think a girl in perpetual motion would actually be reducing her heart risks.
However, girls are generally expected to be quieter and calmer than boys. A girl whose behavior doesn’t fit these expectations can become very stressed. And that’s what may affect her health longterm, say researchers.
Psychosomatic Medicine, Vol. 68, No. 4