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Abdominal fat may raise blood
pressure
New York -
Adults who carry most of their excess weight around the middle
may be at particular risk of high blood pressure, new research shows.
In a 10-year study of Chinese adults,
researchers found that those whose waistlines expanded over the years
showed a similar increase in blood pressure.
Moreover, even young men and women
who were abdominally obese at the start of the study, or who became so
over time, were more likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure.
The findings appear in the American
Journal of Hypertension.
Research has shown that
"apple-shaped" people are at greater risk of heart disease and type 2
diabetes than those whose extra pounds dwell largely on the hips and
thighs. Studies have also suggested that general obesity raises the
risk of high blood pressure, or hypertension.
But it hasn't been clear whether
abdominal obesity, per se, can cause hypertension, Dr. Chen-Huan Chen,
the study's senior author, told Reuters Health.
This study may be the first to
"clearly show" that abdominal obesity predicts future hypertension,
regardless of a person's current blood pressure or overall body
weight, said Chen, a professor of medicine at National Yang-Ming
University in Taipei, Taiwan.
It is possible, he noted, for a
person to have a very large waistline but not weigh enough to be
considered generally obese.
For their study, Chen and his
colleagues followed 2,377 men and women age 30 and up for 10 years,
during which time one-quarter developed high blood pressure. Those
with large waistlines at the outset had a higher risk than their
slimmer counterparts, as did people who became abdominally obese
during the study period.
Even in a group of healthy adults
ages 30 to 43 years, the researchers found that those whose waistlines
expanded also saw their blood pressure increase.
Abdominal obesity often exists as
part of a cluster of conditions known collectively as metabolic
syndrome -- the other components being abnormal cholesterol levels,
hypertension and insulin resistance, a precursor to type 2 diabetes.
It's a complex collection of heart
risks, and it's not fully clear which problem might cause the others.
But the current findings support the theory that abdominal obesity is
the "true culprit" that spurs the development of insulin resistance,
and then other components of metabolic syndrome, according to Chen.
If that's the case, he noted, "it is
obvious that the most important thing to do is to prevent abdominal
obesity, not just obesity."
There's no single definition of
abdominal obesity, but in general, the waist sizes used to define
metabolic syndrome are 35 inches or more for women and 40 inches or
more for men. -- Reuters Limited
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