From the Journals

Overweight and obese individuals face greater cardiovascular morbidity


 

FROM JAMA CARDIOLOGY

“While we do observe evidence of the well-described overweight and obesity paradox, in which heavier individuals appear to live longer on average after diagnosis of CVD compared with individuals with normal BMI, our data when following up individuals prior to the onset of CVD indicate that this occurs because of a trend toward earlier onset of disease in individuals who are overweight and obese,” they wrote.

The study did not account for change in BMI over the course of follow-up, nor did it use data on fat distribution or the degree of visceral adiposity, the researchers noted.

“Additional important outcomes of obesity-related morbidity, such as atrial fibrillation, sleep-disordered breathing, and chronic liver disease, were not ascertained routinely in our cohort studies, and we likely underestimated the overall comorbidity burden of excess weight.”

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute supported the study. No conflicts of interest were declared.

SOURCE: Khan SS et al. JAMA Cardiol. 2018 Feb 28. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2018.0022.

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