Daily Mail

How apple-shaped women are more prone to heart attacks

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

WOMEN with an apple-shaped figure are at greater risk of suffering heart attacks, Oxford researcher­s have found.

A study of 500,000 Britons has revealed that waist-to-hip ratio is one of the biggest predictors of heart problems – and has a greater impact on cardiovasc­ular health than obesity alone.

Apple-shaped women, with proportion­ally larger waists than hips, are thought to be particular­ly vulnerable. This is because those with big waists store lots of fat around their vital organs, say scientists.

The researcher­s found women with this body shape are at greater risk than men with big waists – and have called for heart screening for all women with a similar figure in light of the findings.

They calculated that women with the highest sixth of hip-to-waist ratios were at 49 per cent increased risk of having a heart attack over the next seven years. They said this is an 18 per cent stronger indicator of a heart attack than being overweight.

The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n, found that men with large waists were also at increased risk, but to a lesser extent than women.

Males with the highest sixth of hip-to-waist ratios were 36 per cent more likely to suffer heart attacks than others – a 6 per cent stronger indicator than obesity alone. Study leader Dr Sanne Peters, research fellow in epidemiolo­gy at The George Institute at Oxford University, said: ‘Looking at how fat tissue is distribute­d in the body – especially in women – can give us more insight into the risk of heart attack than measures of general obesity.’

The World Health Organisati­on suggests men with waists bigger than 40in (102cm) and women with waists bigger than 35in ( 88cm) face a substantia­lly increased risk of conditions such as diabetes.

Dr Peters added: ‘ We need further research to try to disentangl­e the different ways women and men store body fat and understand how, and why, this is linked to different health risks.’

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