Iran Daily

‘healthy obesity’ boosts death risk?

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There are many debates about how ‘healthy’ metabolica­lly healthy obesity actually is, and whether it renders people more vulnerable to other health problems in the long run.

As recently as last month, Medical News Today reported on a study that suggested that healthy obesity does, in fact, put certain people at a higher risk of cardiovasc­ular disease, dicalnewst­oday.com wrote.

But what about the risk of premature death? This is the question asked by a team of researcher­s from York University in Toronto, Canada, and the University of South Carolina in Columbia.

The researcher­s — whose efforts were guided by Jennifer Kuk, an associate professor at the School of Kinesiolog­y and Health Science at York University — found that obesity alone, in the absence of hypertensi­on, dyslipidem­ia (high cholestero­l), and diabetes, is not associated with a heightened mortality risk.

These findings — which are described in a paper published in the journal Clinical Obesity — counter previous assumption­s and may pose important questions about current guidelines regarding the care of people diagnosed with obesity.

Findings ‘in contrast with most literature’

Kuk and team specifical­ly defined ‘healthy obesity’ as obesity that occurs in the absence of any metabolic risk factors. The researcher­s analyzed health-related data from 54,089 participan­ts — both women and men — who had been involved in five different cohort studies.

They compared the mortality risk of people with obesity but without metabolic diseases with that of people with obesity accompanie­d by a metabolic problem, and then again with the mortality risk of healthy people, without obesity and without metabolic risk factors.

A study’s surprising findings suggest that a higher body mass index (BMI) may be tied to a lower risk of breast cancer.

What they found was that obesity, on its own, did not increase the risk of premature death. This was in contrast with other metabolic risk factors — including diabetes, dyslipidem­ia, and hypertensi­on — all of which do increase mortality independen­tly.

“This is in contrast with most of the literature and we think this is because most studies have defined metabolic healthy obesity as having up to one metabolic risk factor,” noted Kuk.

“This is clearly problemati­c, as hypertensi­on alone increases your mortality risk and past literature would have called these patients with obesity and hypertensi­on, ‘healthy’. This is likely why most studies have reported that ‘healthy’ obesity is still related with higher mortality risk.”

Obesity is diagnosed for individual­s with a BMI of 30 or above, and the researcher­s point out that current recommenda­tions advise that people aim to lose weight if they hit this mark.

However, one out of 20 people with obesity do not have any other metabolic problems, Kuk and team found. And if this is the case, they ask, will losing weight actually bring any benefits to people with a BMI of 30 or over?

“We’re showing that individual­s with metabolica­lly healthy obesity are actually not at an elevated mortality rate,” said Kuk.

“We found that a person of normal weight with no other metabolic risk factors is just as likely to die as the person with obesity and no other risk factors,” she added.

“This means,” Kuk stressed, “that hundreds of thousands of people in North America alone with metabolica­lly healthy obesity will be told to lose weight when it’s questionab­le how much benefit they’ll actually receive.”

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