Framingham heart study data show strong and independent link between even moderate obesity and heart failure

Even a moderate degree of excess body weight is strongly and independently associated with increased risk for heart failure, according to an article in the August 1st issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. The risk, which increases continuously with increasing degrees of body weight, is 34 percent higher for overweight individuals and 104 percent higher for obese persons.

The large, community-based study investigated the relations between body mass index, a measure of excess weight for height, and the risk of heart failure in over 5,000 participants in the Framingham Heart Study, a landmark epidemiological study that began in 1948.

"Obesity has reached epidemic proportions in the United States and it is increasing," said Dr. Claude Lenfant of the National Institutes of Health. "While the death rate from heart disease has decreased by 60 percent over the last 40 years, the death rate from heart failure has not declined. This study suggests that obesity is an important risk factor for heart failure in both women and men. Promoting optimal body weight may help reduce the burden of heart failure we're seeing," he added.

An estimated 61 percent of U.S. adults aged 20 to 74 years are either overweight or obese. About 34 percent of these people are overweight and 27 percent, or 50 million people, are obese. Nearly 5 million people in the U.S. have heart failure.

"It was unclear from the scientific literature whether lesser degrees of obesity predispose an individual for heart failure, as most of the existing studies were limited to people who were severely obese (body mass index over 40)," said Dr. Satish Kenchaiah, lead author of the study. Participants in the study, who were followed for nearly 15 years, were under continuous surveillance for the development of cardiovascular events. The researchers looked for the occurrence of a first episode of heart failure.

After adjustment for known risk factors, there was an increase in the risk of heart failure of 5 percent for men and 7 percent for women for each increment of 1 in the body mass index. Compared with normal weight individuals, obese women had a doubling of the risk of heart failure and obese men had a 90 percent increase in the risk of heart failure.
Overweight individuals were at intermediate risk. The effect of index on heart failure risk did not vary with age, sex, smoking status, alcohol consumption or the presence or absence of valve disease or diabetes.

"We know that obesity and overweight are associated with several health hazards. For example, they increase the risk of high blood pressure and diabetes, both key risk factors for heart failure," said study co-author Dr. Ramachandran Vasan. "We found that even after accounting for these other risk factors, obesity was independently associated with the risk of heart failure," he added.

Dr. Daniel Levy, director of the Framingham Heart Study and co-author of the study, noted that the obesity trend in young Americans may affect future rates of heart failure.

"We know that there are growing numbers of young children with advanced degrees of obesity. The results of this study are a wake-up call to a public health problem that we may be addressing 10 to 50 years from now, when these obese youngsters become old enough to be at risk of heart failure," he said.

For children aged 6 to11 years, an estimated 13 percent are overweight; for
adolescents aged 12 to19 years, an estimated 14 percent are overweight. During the
past two decades the prevalence of overweight has doubled among children and
has almost tripled among adolescents.

Levy stressed the importance of maintaining a healthy weight, both for children and adults, with dietary measures and regular physical activity the keys to addressing overweight and obesity problems. He advised individuals who fall into the overweight and obese body mass index ranges should make efforts to reduce index into the normal range.








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