Metabolic Syndrome Not
Limited to Obese People
Metabolic syndrome, a cluster of problems
that can raise the risk of heart disease, is often associated
with obesity, but new research indicates that people of normal
weight can develop the condition too.
As reported in the journal Diabetes
Care, Dr. Marie-Pierre St.-Onge, from the University of Alabama
at Birmingham, and colleagues assessed the rate of metabolic syndrome
among non-obese subjects by analyzing data from the Third National
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). Data from
7602 adults participants were included in the analysis.
Subjects were diagnosed with metabolic
syndrome if at least three of the following were present: high
triglycerides, low HDL "good" cholesterol, high blood pressure,
high blood sugar, and large waist circumference.
In subjects at the low end of normal
weight, the rate of metabolic syndrome ranged from 0.9 to 3.0
percent, depending on ethnicity and gender. In contrast, in slightly
overweight individuals, the rates were considerably higher --
between 9.6 and 22.5 percent.
The risk of metabolic syndrome
increased as a person's body weight rose from the low end of normal
to slightly overweight.
Compared with low-normal weight
men, those who were classified as mid-normal weight, upper-normal
weight, and slightly overweight were 4.1-, 5.4-, and 9.1-times
more likely, respectively, to develop metabolic syndrome.
The corresponding risks were even
more pronounced in women, at 4.3-, 7.8-, and 17.3-fold higher.
"The high prevalence of metabolic
syndrome in normal-weight and slightly overweight individuals
warrants investigation of the impact of weight loss and physical
activity in this population group," the authors state.
Screening for the syndrome in such
individuals "may be beneficial in the prevention of diabetes and
cardiovascular disease," they add.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, September
2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 8, 2004
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