When a doctor determines
your risk for heart disease, he or she might look
at your weight, cholesterol level and blood pressure.
But soon, they may also look at your neck.
Independent of other factors, the width of your
neck may play a role in determining your heart
disease risk, according to researchers with the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute's Framingham
Heart Study, who presented their data at a meeting
of the American Heart Association in Orlando,
Fla.
"It's very interesting that neck circumference
was associated with [higher measures of] heart
disease risk," said Dr. Vijay Nambi, a cardiologist
at the Baylor College of Medicine, who was not
involved with the research.
He noted that if the results of the preliminary
research hold up after further study, it could provide
a novel approach in determining a patient's risk.
"We normally end up struggling with trying
to find out what are the best measures of obesity
and fat?" said Nambi.
Since this is the first presentation of the data,
Sarah Rosner Preis, a postdoctoral fellow with
NHLBI and the study's lead author, noted that
the findings are preliminary. Her findings were
that a wider neck was associated with riskier
levels of other measurements for heart disease
-- such as higher systolic blood pressure and
lower "good" HDL cholesterol -- but
not heart disease itself.
Still, the connection could be an important one
if the finding is borne out in future research.
And if true, heart disease would join a list of
other diseases linked to a thicker neck.
"To our knowledge, there has been no study
that has specifically examined the association
between neck circumference and risk of heart disease,"
she said. "Prior studies have suggested that
neck circumference may be associated with diabetes,
insulin resistance and hypertension."
Neck measurement as a sign of heart disease risk
would be easier to look at than visceral adipose
tissue, or VAT -- the type of deep-lying fat that
surrounds organs in the abdomen, Nambi says.
"It's an easy enough measurement, it doesn't
cost anything. It just takes a minute or so to
measure it," he said. Levels of VAT, on the
other hand, can only be determined with a CT scan.
But even if a thicker neck turns out to be a sign
of an at-risk heart, Nambi said, that might not
mean that measuring your neck alone will ever be
a conclusive test that lets a doctor determine heart
disease risk.
He noted that even now, there is some correlation
between waist-to-hip ratio and obesity and heart
disease, but cholesterol level and blood pressure
remain the measurements of choice in determining
heart risk. The reason is that there are numeric
goals for cholesterol and blood pressure, but
there is not as simple a numeric target for weight
loss.
Similarly, he noted, more research would be needed
to determine how the circumference of the neck
affects heart disease risk in order for the measurement
to become useful in the clinic.
Ultimately, said Nambi, research is needed to
determine whether the neck fat causes heart disease
or if it is just a sign of risks caused by something
else.
And ultimately, obsessing about your collar size
may not be the key to a healthy heart.
"When you lose weight from one source, you're
going to lose fat all over your body," he
said. "Having a healthy lifestyle, several
studies have shown that's the best you can do
to improve your [heart health] profile."