Study Documents Obesity and Its Association with Heart Risk
Obesity rates appear high in most but not all ethnic groups in the
The
Gregory L. Burke, MD, MS, of Wake Forest University School of Medicine in
A large proportion of white, African American and Hispanic participants were overweight (60% to 85%) and obese (30% to 50%), while fewer Chinese American participants were overweight (33%) or obese (5%), the authors wrote. A higher body mass index was associated with more adverse levels of blood pressure, lipoproteins [cholesterol] and fasting glucose despite a higher prevalence of pharmacologic treatment.
Obesity was also associated with the following risk factors for heart disease and stroke:
a 17% greater risk of coronary artery calcium, which may be a marker for coronary artery disease;
a 45% greater risk of having artery walls thicker than the 80th percentile in the common funny gifs carotid arteries, which is a marker for atherosclerosis; and
a 2.7-fold greater risk of having a left ventricle with a mass higher than the 80th percentile.
These data confirm the epidemic of obesity in most but not all racial and ethnic groups, the authors concluded. The observed low prevalence of obesity in Chinese American participants indicates that high rates of obesity should not be considered inevitable. These findings may be viewed as indicators of potential future increases in vascular disease burden and health care costs associated with the obesity epidemic.
Source: American Medical Association