In atrial fibrillation, the upper chambers of the heart, or atria,
quiver instead of beating to move blood effectively. While the
condition has long been linked to obesity, the current study offers
fresh evidence of how gender may impact the risk of atrial
fibrillation associated with excess weight.
Extremely obese men, for example, were more than four times more
likely to develop atrial fibrillation than men who maintained a
healthy weight, the study found. By contrast, extremely obese women
had almost twice the risk of developing atrial fibrillation as women
at a healthy weight.
“Not only does being overweight/obese change the structure of the
heart, making it more susceptible to AF development, but other risk
factors for AF are more likely to exist in overweight and obese
individuals, such as high blood pressure,” said lead study author
Jocasta Ball of the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne,
Australia.
“For patients, recognizing that being overweight or obese increases
the risk of future AF development and that even small reductions in
BMI can reduce this risk should trigger an attempt at weight loss,”
Ball said by email.
Atrial fibrillation is the most common heart rhythm disorder,
affecting approximately 2 to 3 percent of the world’s population,
researchers note in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
For the current study, researchers examined survey data from 24,799
adults in Norway who were followed for an average of about 16 years
to see how their weight impacted their chance of developing atrial
fibrillation.
Atrial fibrillation most often develops after age 50. At the start
of the study, participants were typically in their mid- to late-
30s. Most of them also started out at a healthy weight based on
their body mass index (BMI) – a ratio of weight to height.
During the study period, 811 men and 918 women developed atrial
fibrillation.
Even when people weren't seriously overweight, a higher BMI was
still tied with a higher risk for atrial fibrillation. For example,
compared to a BMI of 23, which falls within a healthy weight range,
men with a BMI of 25, which is slightly overweight, were 14 percent
more likely to develop atrial fibrillation.
When men had a BMI of 18, which is underweight, they were 25 percent
less likely to develop atrial fibrillation than men with a BMI of
23. Men with a BMI of 20, meanwhile, were 14 percent less likely to
develop atrial fibrillation than men with a BMI of 23.
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For women, the pattern was similar at lower weights but as with
heavier individuals, the association between obesity and atrial
fibrillation wasn’t as strong as it was with men.
Women with a BMI of 18 were 18 percent less likely to develop atrial
fibrillation than women with a BMI of 23, and women with a BMI of 20
had an 11 percent lower risk.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how obesity causes atrial fibrillation. Researchers also lacked
data on changes over time in medical conditions or medication use
that might independently influence the risk of atrial fibrillation.
Still, the study adds to the evidence linking excess weight to a
higher risk of atrial fibrillation, said Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a
cardiology researcher at the University of California Los Angeles
who wasn’t involved in the study.
“While the study finds the relationship was stronger in men, both
men and women who were overweight or obese according to their body
mass index were at increased risk for atrial fibrillation,” Fonarow
said by email.
Losing even a little weight may help lower the risk, said Dr. Prash
Sanders, a researcher at the University of Adelaide in Australia who
wasn’t involved in the study.
“While even small amounts of weight loss can make a difference, we
see an even greater magnitude in reduction of risk if more weight
loss is achieved,” Sanders said by email. “Importantly, research has
demonstrated that the structural and electrical changes we see in
overweight and obese individuals are reversible with weight loss.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2IgKDlI Journal of the American Heart
Association, online April 19, 2018.
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