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View Full Version : Obesity And Diabetes Double Risk Of Heart Failure


T_Dia
05-30-2009, 03:15 PM
Obesity, like diabetes, is increasing in prevalence. The latest report from Euroaspire, Europe's largest survey of cardiovascular risk factors in coronary patients, found that the prevalence of obesity had increased from 25 per cent in 1997 to 38 per cent in just ten years – and this in people who had already had at least one heart attack.

Now, a session at Heart Failure 2009 emphasises that obesity is not just associated with an increased risk of heart attack, but also – and especially - with an increased risk of heart failure. "Obesity is at least as great a risk factor for heart failure as it is for heart attack or stroke," says Professor McMurray. "Obesity more than doubles the risk."

The pathways by which obesity plays such a role in heart failure are not yet fully understood, but have been shown to have an indirect effect via hypertension, or heart attack, or diabetes – and a direct effect on the heart muscle itself. "We know that the underlying changes in the structure and function of the heart may be different in obese and non-obese patients with heart failure," says Professor McMurray. An even more "intriguing" suggestion, he added, is that adipose cells might act as an endocrine tissue, secreting substances which may have a harmful effect on heart tissue and blood vessels.
Full Article (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090530094510.htm).