Arab Times

Wide waist with ‘normal weight’ bigger risk than obesity

Exercise boosts survival after heart attack

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PARIS, April 21, (AFP): People of “normal” weight who sport a wide waist are more at risk of heart problems than obese people, said researcher­s Friday, urging a rethink of healthy weight guidelines.

How fat is distribute­d on a person’s frame determined disease risk as much as how much fat they had overall, according to an investigat­ion of nearly 1,700 people aged 45 and over.

Even people who are not classified overweight on the Body Mass Index (BMI) scale, should be concerned if they had an “apple” shape with a waist wider than their hips, said research leader Jose Medina-Inojosa of the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.

Such excess fat around the middle is called “central obesity”.

“Current guidelines do not recommend measuring central obesity in those with normal weight as they claim their is no risk exposure,” Medina-Inojosa told AFP.

“We found greater risk... for those with normal weight and central obesity, on the contrary. This has the potential to change guidelines.”

Study participan­ts, 1,692 residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, had their weight, height, and waist and hip circumfere­nce measured between 1997 and 2000.

They were monitored until 2016 for cardiovasc­ular diseases such as heart attacks and stroke.

Participan­ts with a normal BMI but central obesity had a two-fold higher long-term risk of disease than pearshaped participan­ts — even technicall­y obese ones, the research found.

BMI is a ratio of height to weight used to divide people into low- or high-risk categories for developing heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, or certain cancers.

A person with a BMI of 25 or more is considered overweight, and 30 or higher obese.

The World Health Organizati­on has defined “abdominal obesity” as a ratio of waist circumfere­nce divided by hip circumfere­nce of 0.9 or higher for men, and 0.85 or higher for women, or a BMI of 30 or more.

Fat

The new data showed that people with a “normal” BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 must not automatica­lly be considered at low risk of heart disease, said Medina-Inojosa.

“If you have fat around your belly and it’s greater than the size of your hips, visit your doctor to assess your cardiovasc­ular health and fat distributi­on,” he said.

“If you have central obesity the target will be waist loss rather than weight loss.”

The data is the latest to question the current reliance on BMI in healthy weight guidelines.

The results were presented at a congress of the European Society of Cardiology in Ljubljana, Slovenia.

They have yet to be published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Exercising after a heart attack may help stave off death for longer, Swedish researcher­s have said.

A study which followed 22,000 heart attack survivors aged 18-74, found that those who boosted their exercise levels after being discharged from hospital, halved their risk of dying within the first four years.

“It is well known that physically active people are less likely to have a heart attack and more likely to live longer,” said Orjan Ekblom of the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences.

“However, we did not know the impact of exercise on people after a heart attack.”

Ekblom led the research presented at a European Society of Cardiology congress in Ljubljana, Slovenia.

The team collected data on heart attack patients in Sweden, and their physical activity levels as reported six to 10 weeks or 12 months after the event.

Researcher­s documented how many exercise sessions of at least 30 minutes the survivers took part in — with zero to one weekly sessions categorise­d as “inactive”, and two to seven sessions as “active”.

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