By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Published: February 01, 2010
Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and
Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner | |
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Interview with: Sarah Appleton, Postgraduate student, University of Adelaide, Australia |
When it comes to predicting chronic disease, body mass index doesn't tell the whole story, according to a population-based study that found elevated risk with obesity and other metabolic risk factors independently.
Metabolically-healthy obese people tended toward being at least twice as likely to develop multiple metabolic risk factors and diabetes as healthy, normal weight individuals over the subsequent 3.5 years of a study led by Sarah Appleton, a postgraduate student at the University of Adelaide, Australia.
However, normal weight individuals with metabolic risk factors -- a group the researchers called "metabolically obese" -- were at greater risk, she told attendees at the International Congress on Abdominal Obesity in Hong Kong, a conference sponsored by the International Chair on Cardiometabolic Risk. |
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