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Waist Circumference
Predicts Heart Disease Risk
The circumference of your waist correlates
more closely with several known risk factors for heart disease
than does your body mass index (BMI) -- the measure of weight
in relation to height -- according to a report in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The findings are based on an analysis
of data from 10,969 subjects who participated in the third National
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1998 to 1994.
Dr. Shankuan Zhu, from the Medical
College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and colleagues found that waist
circumference was more strongly tied to cholesterol levels, blood
pressure, and blood glucose levels than was BMI.
Among men, the circumferences that
were equivalent in terms of cardiovascular risk to being overweight
or obese were highest for whites, lowest for blacks, and intermediate
for Mexican Americans. By contrast, the waist measurement cutoffs
among women varied little by ethnicity.
Combining the data from the three
ethnic groups, waist measurements of 89 and 101 centimeters (35
and 40 inches) in men conferred a cardiovascular risk comparable
to BMIs of 25 (overweight) and 30 (obese).
The waistlines with the corresponding
risks for women were 83 and 94 cm (about 33 and 37 ins).
"The present study reports waist
circumference cutoffs that correspond to well-established BMI
cutoffs, recommended by the World Health Organization and the
National Institutes of Health for overweight and obesity, in their
association with cardiovascular disease risk factors," the researchers
conclude.
"Our findings indicate that waist
circumference is a better indicator of cardiovascular disease
risk than is BMI across three race-ethnicity groups."
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, February 2005.
Reference
Source 89
February 21, 2005
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