Obesity on its own is a risk factor for heart disease. The study
focused on the odds of heart problems for people at various weights
who were considered metabolically healthy because they didn’t have
three other risk factors for heart disease: diabetes, high blood
pressure or elevated cholesterol.
Metabolically healthy obese people were 49 percent more likely to
develop cardiovascular disease and almost twice as likely to develop
heart failure as normal-weight people without any metabolic
abnormalities, the study found.
“Although those `metabolically healthy’ obese people may not have
those risk factors we described – diabetes and high blood pressure
and blood fats – being obese is already a metabolic abnormality,”
said senior study author Neil Thomas of the University of Birmingham
in the UK.
“There is no such thing as `metabolically healthy’ and obese,”
Thomas said by email.
Globally, 1.9 billion adults are overweight or obese, according to
the World Health Organization. Obesity increases the risk of heart
disease, diabetes, joint disorders and certain cancers.
For the study, researchers focused on one commonly used measure of
obesity known as body-mass index (BMI), a measure of weight relative
to height.
A BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered healthy, 25 to 29.9 is
overweight, 30 or above is obese. Anyone with a BMI below 18.5 is
considered underweight.
An adult who is 5’ 9” (175 cm) tall and weighs from 125 lbs (57 kg)
to 168 pounds (76 kg) would have a healthy weight and a BMI of 18.5
to 24.9, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. An obese adult at that height would weigh at least 203
pounds (92 kg) and have a BMI of 30 or more.
For the current study, researchers examined data on 3.5 million
adults who were at least initially free of heart disease.
Overall, about 3 percent of these people were underweight without
any metabolic abnormalities, 38 percent were metabolically healthy
and at a normal weight, and 26 percent were overweight without
metabolic issues. Another 15 percent were metabolically healthy and
obese.
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Metabolic problems were rare, regardless of people’s weight.
But like obese people in the study, individuals who were not obese
but who were overweight without metabolic abnormalities still had a
higher risk of heart disease than people who were metabolically
healthy and also at a healthy weight, researchers report in the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Individuals who were underweight and without metabolic abnormalities
had a higher risk of vascular disease than people who were a normal
weight, the study also found. This might be at least partially
explained by smoking, which can mean people are slimmer but also
that they have a higher risk of vascular problems, the authors note.
One limitation of the study is that BMI doesn’t distinguish between
weight from fat versus lean muscle mass, making it possible that at
least some people classified as obese in the study were actually
unusually muscular rather than fat, the authors also point out. The
study might also include people who had undiagnosed risk factors for
cardiovascular disease.
People should not base their understanding of their own health and
fitness on BMI alone, said Jennifer Bea, a researcher at the
University of Arizona in Tucson and author of an accompanying
editorial.
“You can have a normal BMI, but low muscle tone and low bone mass,
thus by default, a high percentage of fat,” Bea said by email. “Even
normal weight individuals based on BMI can have metabolic
dysfunction and be at risk.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2wWgvTW Journal of the American College of
Cardiology, online September 11, 2017.
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