Association between depression and visceral fat may explain link to cardiovascular disease
Numerous studies have shown that depression is associated
with an increased risk of heart disease, but exactly how has never been clear.
Now, researchers at Rush University Medical Center have shown that depression
is linked with the accumulation of visceral fat, which has long been known to
increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
The study is posted online and published in the May issue
of Psychosomatic Medicine.
"Our results suggest that central adiposity is an
important pathway by which depression contributes to the risk for cardiovascular
disease and diabetes," said Lynda Powell, Ph.D., chairperson of the Department
of Preventive Medicine at Rush and the study's principal investigator. "In
our study, depressive symptoms were clearly related to deposits of visceral fat,
which is the type of fat involved in disease."
The study included 409 middle-aged women, about half
African-American and half Caucasian, who were participating in the Women in the
South Side Health Project (WISH) in Chicago, a longitudinal study of the menopausal
transition. Depressive symptoms were assessed using a common screening test, and
visceral fat measured with a CT scan. Although waist size is often used as a proxy
for the amount of visceral fat, it is an inaccurate measure because it includes
subcutaneous fat.
The researchers found a strong correlation between depression
and visceral fat, particularly among overweight and obese women. The results were
the same even when the analysis adjusted for other variables that might explain
the accumulation of visceral fat, such as the level of physical activity. The
study found no association between depressive symptoms and subcutaneous fat. The
findings were the same for both black and white women.
Powell speculated that depression triggers the accumulation
of visceral fat by means of certain chemical changes in the body - like the production
of cortisol and inflammatory compounds - but said that more research is needed
to pinpoint the exact mechanism.
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