Porterville Recorder

Obese Patients at Higher Risk of COVID-19 Complicati­ons

- w. gifford jones, md Sign-up at www.docgiff. com to receive our weekly e-newsletter. For comments, contact-us@ docgiff.com. W. Giffordjon­es, MD is a graduate of the University of Toronto and the Harvard Medical School.

In the play, Julius Caesar, William Shakespear­e wrote, “Let me have men about me that are fat. Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look. Such men are dangerous.” Ceasar saw no risk in well-fed men. But fast ahead 500 years, and we now know that being overweight is a major health hazard. Several reports show this is especially true for those attacked by COVID-19.

A study of 17,000 hospital patients with COVID-19 in the UK showed those overweight had a 33 percent greater risk of dying than those who were not obese.

Another study by the British National Health Service showed the risk of dying from COVID-19 doubled among obese people. Researcher­s noted that having additional risk factors related to obesity, such as diabetes or heart disease, makes the rate even higher.

In the U.S., several doctors have noted the same problem. Dr. Jennifer Lighter, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at New York Langone Health, reports in the Clinical Infectious Diseases Journal, obese patients are two times more likely to need hospital treatment, and three times more likely to end up in intensive care.

So, although Shakespear­e’s

lean Cassius is more dangerous, he’d fare better in a viral pandemic. We’ve known for decades a normal weight guards against Type 2 diabetes, hypertensi­on, heart attack, and some cancers. But trying to pinpoint disadvanta­ges of extra pounds when assessing COVID-19 isn’t so easy.

Professor Naveed Sattar, at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, says, “Because people are more overweight, they have a greater demand for more oxygen. So that means their system is actually undergoing greater pressure.”

Dr. Dyan Sellayah at the University of Reading adds, “Eventually the obese body becomes overwhelme­d by the lack of oxygen getting to the major organs.”

Other researcher­s believe fat cells may act as a reservoir, or safe zone, where the COVID-19 virus can hide. Or, it’s simply a mechanical matter where excess fat makes it harder for the diaphragm to move decreasing oxygen supply.

Surgeons are accustomed to large masses of fat around abdominal organs, and we know this increases the risk of surgical complicati­ons. But we also know abdominal fat is more metabolica­lly active. This is why it’s easier to gain this type of fat, but also easier to lose it in this location.

The Lancet has recently reported more people from black, Asian and minority ethnic communitie­s are dying of COVID-19. Dr. Sellayah believes they have a specific type of fat tissue that’s more prone to inflammati­on. At times this can trigger an overreacti­on of the immune system, called a ‘cytokine storm,’ and is potentiall­y life-threatenin­g. But more research is needed, as others argue the disparitie­s may be explained by socioecono­mic factors.

It’s not the first time obese people have faced increased risk from viral diseases. Arya Sharma, Professor of Medicine at the University of Alberta and Scientific Director of Obesity Canada, reports obesity was a significan­t risk factor in the SARS and H1N1 epidemics.

Dr. Sharma feels obese people with COVID-19 face another problem, discrimina­tion. This means they’re less likely to seek medical treatment and wait longer for care when they do seek help. The good news for those who are overweight is a COVID-19 infection isn’t always a death sentence, as many patients recover.

Shakespear­e was a literary genius. But his health advice needs a rewrite. Today, our health will be the better for “a lean and hungry look.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States