From the Journals

Overweight and obese individuals face greater cardiovascular morbidity


 

FROM JAMA CARDIOLOGY

After adjustment for age, ethnicity, and smoking status, the competing hazard ratios for experiencing a cardiovascular disease event compared to a noncardiovascular disease death were greater in the higher-BMI categories, and greatest among morbidly obese middle-aged men and women, largely because of a greater proportion of coronary heart disease and heart failure events.

“In addition, greater all-cause mortality in higher-BMI categories occurred at the expense of a greater proportion of deaths from cardiovascular causes in middle-aged men and women who are overweight and obese,” wrote Sadiya S. Khan, MD, MSc, of Northwestern University, Chicago, and her coauthors.

The research suggested that for each increasing unit of BMI in middle-aged men and women, the adjusted competing hazard ratios of incident cardiovascular disease events increased by a significant 5%.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Surgical LAA occlusion tops anticoagulation for AF thromboprotection
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: New stroke guideline embraces imaging-guided thrombectomy
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: COMPASS shows stroke-clot aspiration noninferior to retrieval
MDedge Neurology
Cerebrospinal tract may help decide mild stroke treatment
MDedge Neurology
Heart attacks bring 12 weeks of higher stroke risk
MDedge Neurology
Atrial fibrosis weighed as key arrhythmia, stroke trigger
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: Rivaroxaban plus aspirin halves ischemic strokes
MDedge Neurology
Aspirin blunts early stroke risk from preeclampsia
MDedge Neurology
EMS stroke field triage improves outcomes
MDedge Neurology
Adenotonsillectomy reduced hypertension in OSA subgroup
MDedge Neurology