Pot Belly Boosts Risk of Sudden Cardiac
Death: Study
Carrying weight in your midsection adds to obesity's dangers
A "spare
tire" around the midsection raises the odds of sudden cardiac death in
obese people, a new study finds.
A larger
waist-to-hip ratio matters even more than body-mass index when it comes to
sudden cardiac death risk, said study researcher Dr. Selcuk Adabag, an
associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.
Body-mass index is a measure of weight relative to height used to determine
normal weight and obesity.
Obesity, a
moderate risk factor for sudden cardiac death, and apple-shaped bodies often go
hand in hand.
"The
significance of this study is that it shows that abdominal obesity is an
independent risk factor for sudden cardiac death, even after accounting for
factors such as diabetes, hypertension and coronary heart disease," said
Adabag, who is also a cardiac electrophysiologist at the Veterans
Administration Medical Center in Minneapolis.
Adabag was
scheduled to present the findings Wednesday at the annual meeting of the Heart
Rhythm Society in Boston.
Sudden cardiac
death is responsible for more than 250,000 deaths in the United States each
year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is
defined as death that occurs within an hour of initial symptoms. Besides
obesity, risk factors include coronary heart disease and heart rhythm problems.
For the study,
Adabag looked at the records of more than 15,000 people with an average age of
54 from four U.S. locales who were enrolled in the Atherosclerosis Risk in
Communities Study. Over 13 years, more than 300 of the participants experienced
sudden cardiac death.
After Adabag
took into account age, sex, race, education, smoking status and family history
of heart disease, he found that body-mass index, waist circumference and
waist-to-hip ratio all were linked with sudden cardiac death.
"I
expected there would be some relationship with all [those factors]
measured," he said.
But when he factored
in co-occurring conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure, heart failure
and a high LDL, or 'bad," cholesterol, among other problems, only the
elevated waist-to-hip ratio still was linked with sudden cardiac death.
Although the
reason people with apple-shaped bodies have higher risks than those with
pear-shaped bodies isn't clear-cut, Adabag speculates that where fat is stored
is important for heart risks.
"Fat in
the abdomen spews inflammatory substances," he said. Inflammation is
linked with heart problems.
Dr. Suzanne
Steinbaum, a preventive cardiologist and director of Women and Heart Disease at
Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said the findings are interesting.
"We have
an understanding that an elevated waist-to-hip ratio is associated with
conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure," Steinbaum said.
"But what we never really appreciated before was the association with
sudden cardiac death."
A waist-to-hip
ratio of more than 0.8 for women and 0.95 for men is considered unhealthy. A
person with 35-inch hips and a 35-inch waist, for instance, would have a ratio
of 1, which is undesirable.
How do you
improve your waist-to-hip ratio? "The usual way that we prevent obesity:
exercise and diet -- a healthier lifestyle," Adabag said.
"Exercise
is so crucial," Steinbaum said. Those with a pot belly, she added, may be
eating too many simple carbohydrates, such as those found in processed sugary
foods.
In the United
States, two-thirds of adults and one-third of children reportedly are overweight
or obese, according to background information included in Adabag's study.
While the
study uncovered a link between abdominal fat and heart risks, it didn't prove a
cause-and-effect relationship.
Data and
conclusions presented at meetings should be considered preliminary until
published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.
More
information
To learn more
about sudden cardiac death, visit the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
.
(SOURCE:
Selcuk Adabag, M.D., associate professor, medicine, University of Minnesota,
and cardiac electrophysiologist, Veterans Administration Medical Center,
Minneapolis; Suzanne Steinbaum, D.O., director, Women and Heart Disease, Lenox
Hill Hospital, New York City; Heart Rhythm Society, annual meeting, May 9,
2012, Boston)
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