Obesity ‘ups kidney stone risk’
February 18th, 2010 - 1:52 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 18 (ANI): A new study from Johns Hopkins has shown that obesity nearly doubles the risk of developing kidney stones.
The research also showed that the degree of obesity doesn’t appear to increase or decrease the risk one way or the other.
“The common thinking was that as weight rises, kidney stone risk rises as well, but our study refutes that,” says study leader Brian R. Matlaga, assistant professor of urology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and director of stone diseases and ambulatory care at Hopkins’ James Buchanan Brady Urological Institute.
“Whether someone is mildly obese or morbidly obese, the risk for getting kidney stones is the same,” he added.
Over the last decade, several epidemiological studies have shown a strong connection between obesity and kidney stone disease.
However, as obesity continues to rise worldwide, Matlaga and his colleagues wondered whether different subcategories of obesity, ranging from mildly to morbidly obese, presented different risks.
To answer the question, the researchers used a national insurance claims database to identify 95,598 people who had completed a “health risk assessment” form with information about their body mass index (BMI), a measure of body fat calculated by dividing weight by height, and a general indicator of underweight, healthy weight, or overweight.
The database, which spanned over a five-year period from 2002 to 2006, also had encoded information indicating whether these individuals had been diagnosed with kidney stone disease.
Using a definition of obesity as having a BMI greater than 30 kg/m2 (which, in English measurements, corresponds to a 5 foot tall person who weighs 153 pounds, or a 6 foot tall person who weighs 221 pounds), the researchers calculated the incidence of kidney stones in people who were non-obese and in those who were obese.
Among the non-obese individuals, 2.6 percent were diagnosed during the study period with kidney stones, compared to 4.9 percent of the obese individuals. When the investigators arranged those in the obese group by their BMIs, ranging from above 30 kg/m2 to more than 50 kg/m2, they found that the increased risk remained constant, regardless of how heavy the individuals were.
Matlaga said that he and his colleagues aren’t sure why obese people are more at risk for kidney stones, though metabolic or endocrine factors unique to obesity are likely reasons, along with dietary factors such as a high-salt diet.
The findings are published in the February Journal of Urology. (ANI)
- Obesity raises kidney stone risk - Feb 18, 2010
- Surgery can help obese teens lose weight, shows study - Mar 07, 2011
- Obesity 'ups death risk in severe vehicle crashes' - Dec 22, 2010
- Drugs combo 'yields up to nearly 10 pc weight loss' - Apr 11, 2011
- Ethnicity key to accurate obesity measurements - Apr 22, 2010
- What's your ideal body mass index? - Dec 02, 2010
- Smoking doesn't boost breast cancer risk in obese postmenopausal women - Apr 04, 2011
- Obesity can lead to permanent knee damage: Studies - Feb 14, 2011
- Obese patients at higher risk from major complications after surgery - Apr 19, 2011
- Obesity can cause irreparable damage to knees - Feb 14, 2011
- Weight-loss surgery successfully treats overweight teens - Mar 05, 2011
- One in five diabetics develop morbid obesity - Nov 24, 2009
- Obesity is a killer in its own right - Feb 15, 2011
- Recession beats dieting, gym in slimming people - Mar 04, 2012
- Obese and overweight women, kids think they weigh less - Mar 24, 2011
Tags: body mass index, body mass index bmi, brady urological institute, definition of obesity, english measurements, epidemiological studies, health risk assessment, insurance claims database, James Buchanan, johns hopkins university, johns hopkins university school, johns hopkins university school of medicine, kidney stone disease, kidney stones, last decade, national insurance, obese individuals, risk assessment form, study leader, tall person