Women’s fat hips, men’s bulging waistlines increase blood clot risk
October 27th, 2009 - 2:35 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 27 (ANI): Excess weight on women’s hips and men’s waists elevates the risk of potentially fatal blood clots, says a new study.
Researchers reported in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association that the location of extra pounds appears to affect the risk of blood clots in middle-aged people, but affects men and women differently.
In a 10-year prospective study, Danish scientists assessed the relationship between body mass, weight distribution and incidence of blood clots in veins, a condition known as venous thromboembolism (VTE), among 27,178 men and 29,876 women ages 50 to 64 years old at study entry.
VTE includes deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. During the 10 year study, 641 VTE events occurred according to medical records.
Thromboembolism, an important cause of disease and death in adults, results when a clot breaks free from one blood vessel and blocks another - typically from the legs to the lungs.
The Danish team found statistically significant positive associations between VTE and all measurements of body size, including body weight, body mass index (BMI), total body fat mass, waist circumference and hip circumference, among both men and women. The associations were the same regardless of the type of VTE.
The researchers observed a direct relationship between VTE and weight distribution in both genders. When adjusted for waist and hip circumference, hip circumference was positively associated with VTE in women but not men, while waist circumference was positively associated with VTE in men but not women.
This relationship was independent of other risk factors, such as smoking, physical activity, height, hypertension, diabetes, cholesterol, and, among women, the use of hormone replacement therapy.
“The BMI is a marker of excess weight and correlates well with body fat content in adults; however, it fails to consider the distribution of body fat,” said Marianne Tang Severinsen, M.D., lead author of the study and researcher in the Department of Clinical Epidemiology at Aarhus University Hospital in Aalborg, Denmark.
“The implications to the public are that all types of obesity increase the risk for VTE, but the location of body fat also plays some unknown role. For health professionals, the implication is that all types of fat distribution should be taken into account when evaluating risk for VTE,” the expert added. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Apple-shaped men, pear-shaped women 'at increased blood clot risk' - Oct 30, 2009
- Statins may help prevent blood clots in heart patients - Nov 04, 2009
- Elevated level of protein albumin in urine linked to higher blood clots risk - May 06, 2009
- Influenza vaccination may cut risk of blood clotting in veins - Nov 10, 2008
- Waist-hip ratio better indicator of obesity than BMI readings for older adults - Sep 02, 2009
- Smaller thighs linked to heart disease risk, premature deaths - Sep 05, 2009
- Apple-shaped women 'at higher asthma risk' - Aug 25, 2009
- HRT pills may more than double blood clot risk - May 23, 2008
- Risk of blood clot after surgery higher than previously thought - Dec 04, 2009
- In-flight health problems ''rising'' due to aged passengers, long flights - Feb 19, 2009
- american heart association
- body fat content
- body mass index
- body mass index bmi
- circulation journal of the american heart association
- clot risk
- danish scientists
- danish team
- deep vein thrombosis
- excess weight
- fatal blood clots
- hormone replacement therapy
- mass weight
- prospective study
- pulmonary embolism
- study researchers
- vte
- waist circumference
- weight distribution
- women ages
Posted in Health Science, |