NEW YORK - Obesity and diabetes might not be the double whammy you'd expect,
according to a fresh look at older studies.
Surprisingly, researchers found
that overweight and obese people who get diagnosed with the blood sugar
disorder tend to live longer than their leaner peers.
This so-called "obesity
paradox" has been observed before in chronic diseases like heart and
kidney failure, said Mercedes R. Carnethon of the Feinberg School of Medicine
at Northwestern University in Chicago.
But that doesn't mean you should
start downing ice cream and other high-calorie foods if you just found out you
have diabetes, Carnethon told Reuters Health. Nor does it mean that padding
your waist is a good way to improve your prognosis before you get the disease.
In fact, it's probably not that
excessive pounds are protective, said Carnethon, but rather that lean people
who get diabetes are somehow predisposed to worse health.
"Perhaps those individuals
are somehow genetically loaded to develop diabetes and have higher
mortality," she said. "A normal-weight person who has diabetes has an
extremely high mortality rate."
The new findings are based on
data from five earlier studies that tracked people over time to identify risk
factors for heart disease. More than 2,600 participants developed type 2
diabetes during the studies, and 12 per cent of them had a normal weight when
they got the diagnosis.
The death rate was 1.5 per cent
per year among overweight and obese people, compared to 2.8 per cent per year
among their trimmer peers.
After accounting for several risk
factors for heart disease - including age, blood pressure, high cholesterol and
smoking - lean people were more than twice as likely to die at any given point
as heavier people. The same held true for deaths caused by heart disease, which
is linked to obesity.
"It was a little bit
unexpected to see that," said Carnethon.
One potential limitation of the
study is that the researchers couldn't always account for how much people
smoked, which might explain part of the results.
It's also possible that a few
people might have been diagnosed with diabetes outside of the studies and been
told to slim down by their own doctor before they were seen by the study
researchers. That could also have contributed to the findings, although
Carnethon said the effect would be small.
She added that it's not clear how
to best treat normal-weight people with type 2 diabetes, although weight
training seems preferable over cardio exercise.
Older people and people of Asian
descent are more likely to be normal-weight when diagnosed with diabetes, and
Carnethon stressed that doctors need to take the disorder extra seriously when
it's not accompanied by obesity.
"These findings do apply to
a growing segment of the population," she said.
SOURCE: bit.ly/O0uT3Q Journal of
the American Medical Association, online August 7, 2012.
Reuters
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