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Release Date: Nov. 22, 2004
OBESITY TIED TO INCREASED RISK FOR DOZENS OF CONDITIONS
By Aaron Levin, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Highly obese women are 12 times more likely to have diabetes or knee replacement
surgery, and five times more likely to have high blood pressure than women
who are at a normal weight, says a new study.
Men in the highest weight categories are eight times more likely to have diabetes,
and six times more likely to have a knee replaced or have high blood pressure
than are their normal-weight peers, say researchers for the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
The researchers drew their conclusions from information provided by 73,003
adults aged 50 to 76 who lived in western Washington state.
The researchers correlated obesity with 41 health conditions, including life-threatening
conditions like heart failure; some, like high blood pressure, that increase
the risk of more serious diseases; and health complaints that reduce the quality
of life, like insomnia or chronic fatigue, says lead author Ruth E. Patterson,
Ph.D., R.D.
The study appears in the December
issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. “No other study has provided data on the association of obesity
with such a compendium of health conditions,” Patterson says.
Carrying extra weight was tied to 37 of the 41 health conditions studied in
women and 29 of 41 conditions in men.
In addition to diabetes, knee replacement and high blood pressure, highly
obese women were also more likely to have a history of heart failure, gall
bladder removal, pulmonary embolism, chronic fatigue and insomnia. However,
these women also experienced slightly lower levels of osteoporotic fractures
and constipation, Patterson says.
Highly obese men also experienced more heart failure, fatigue, pulmonary embolism
and insomnia, but slightly lower rates of enlarged prostate.
Doctors should consider the diverse ways that increased weight affects their
patients' health when they counsel or treat them, Patterson says.
"Effective and practical public health approaches to preventing weight
gain and treating obesity are urgently needed," she says.
Support for this study came from the National Cancer Institute.
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