71 research outputs found
Waist circumference as a vital sign in clinical practice: a Consensus Statement from the IAS and ICCR Working Group on Visceral Obesity
Despite decades of unequivocal evidence that waist circumference provides both independent and additive information to BMI for predicting morbidity and risk of death, this measurement is not routinely obtained in clinical practice. This Consensus Statement proposes that measurements of waist circumference afford practitioners with an important opportunity to improve the management and health of patients. We argue that BMI alone is not sufficient to properly assess or manage the cardiometabolic risk associated with increased adiposity in adults and provide a thorough review of the evidence that will empower health practitioners and professional societies to routinely include waist circumference in the evaluation and management of patients with overweight or obesity. We recommend that decreases in waist circumference are a critically important treatment target for reducing adverse health risks for both men and women. Moreover, we describe evidence that clinically relevant reductions in waist circumference can be achieved by routine, moderate-intensity exercise and/or dietary interventions. We identify gaps in the knowledge, including the refinement of waist circumference threshold values for a given BMI category, to optimize obesity risk stratification across age, sex and ethnicity. We recommend that health professionals are trained to properly perform this simple measurement and consider it as an important 'vital sign' in clinical practice
Endocannabinoids and cardiovascular prevention: real progress?
The prevalence of obesity continues to increase and represents one of the principal causes of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. After the discovery of a specific receptor of the psychoactive principle of marijuana, the cannabinoid receptors and their endogenous ligands, several studies have demonstrated the role of this system in the control of food intake and energy balance and its overactivity in obesity. Recent studies with the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant have demonstrated favorable effects such as a reduction in body weight and waist circumference and an improvement in metabolic factors (cholesterol, triglycerides, glycemia etc). Therefore, the antagonism of the endocannabinoid (EC) system, if recent data can be confirmed, could be a new treatment target for high risk overweight or obese patients. Obesity is a growing problem that has epidemic proportions worldwide and is associated with an increased risk of premature death (1–3). Individuals with a central deposition of fats have elevated cardiovascular morbidity and mortality (including stroke, heart failure and myocardial infarction) and, because of a growing prevalence not only in adults but also in adolescents, it was reclassified in AHA guidelines as a “major modifiable risk factor” for coronary heart disease (4, 5). Although first choice therapy in obesity is based on correcting lifestyle (diet and physical activity) in patients with abdominal obesity and high cardiovascular risk and diabetes, often it is necessary to use drugs which reduce the risks. The EC system represents a new target for weight control and the improvement of lipid and glycemic metabolism (6, 7)
Appetite and energy balance signals from adipocytes
Interest in the biology of white adipose tissue has risen markedly with the recent surge in obesity and its associated disorders. The tissue is no longer viewed simply as a vehicle for lipid storage; instead, it is recognized as a major endocrine and secretory organ. White adipocytes release a multiplicity of protein hormones, signals and factors, termed adipokines, with an extensive range of physiological actions. Foremost among these various adipokines is the cytokine-like hormone, leptin, which is synthesized predominantly in white fat. Leptin plays a critical role in the control of appetite and energy balance, with mutations in the genes encoding the hormone or its receptor leading to profound obesity in both rodents and man. Leptin regulates appetite primarily through an interaction with hypothalamic neuroendocrine pathways, inhibiting orexigenic peptides such as neuropeptide Y and orexin A, and stimulating anorexigenic peptides such as proopiomelanocortin. White fat also secretes several putative appetite-related adipokines, which include interleukin-6 and adiponectin, but whether these are indeed significant signals in the regulation of food intake has not been established. Through leptin and the other adipokines it is evident that adipose tissue communicates extensively with other organs and plays a pervasive role in metabolic homeostasis
AHA scientific statement: Summary of the scientific conference on dietary fatty acids and cardiovascular health
Conference Planning and Writing Committee:Penny Kris-Etherton, PhD, Stephen R. Daniels, MD, PhD, Robert H. Eckel, MD, Marguerite Engler, PhD, RN, Barbara V. Howard, PhD, Ronald M. Krauss, MD, Alice H. Lichtenstein, DSc, Frank Sacks, MD, Sachiko St. Jeor, PhD, Meir Stampfer, MD, DrPH, For the American Heart Association Nutrition Committee Speakers and Discussants:, Robert H. Eckel, MD, Scott M. Grundy, MD, PhD, Lawrence J. Appel, MD, MPH, Tim Byers, MD, Hannia Campos, PhD, Greg Cooney, PhD, Margo A. Denke, MD, Barbara V. Howard, PhD, Eileen Kennedy, DSc, Ronald M. Krauss, MD, Penny Kris-Etherton, PhD, Alice H. Lichtenstein, DSc, Peter Marckmann, MD, DSc, Thomas A. Pearson, MD, PhD, Gabriele Riccardi, MD, Lawrence L. Rudel, PhD, Mike Rudrum, PhD, Frank Sacks, MD, Daniel T. Stein, MD, Russell P. Tracy, PhD, Virginia Ursin, PhD, Robert A. Vogel, MD, Peter L. Zock, PhD, AHA Members:, Terry L. Bazzarre, PhD and Julie Clark, AHA Staf
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