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Belly Fat and Dementia

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Hi All,

Found this article - (boy am I in trouble)! Courage

TORONTO - Carrying a spare tire on the abdomen is known to significantly boost

the risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but new research suggests

excess belly fat in middle-age also may contribute to Alzheimer's and other

forms of dementia later in life.

In fact, a long-term study of more than 6,000 people found that those with the

highest amount of abdominal fat in their 40s had about triple the risk of

developing dementia than those with the lowest amount of fat around their

mid-sections.

Having a bulging belly boosted the risk of dementia regardless of whether

participants had normal weight overall or were overweight or obese, as measured

by body mass index (BMI), said principal investigator Whitmer, a research

scientist at Kaiser Permanente, a non-profit U.S. health plan that conducted the

study.

Furthermore, the increased risk of Alzheimer's and other dementias existed

independently of other health conditions, including diabetes, stroke and heart

disease - and the effect did not vary by race or gender, Whitmer said from

Oakland, Calif.

The study, published Thursday in the journal Neurology, found that those who

were overweight by BMI standards and also had a pot belly were 2.3 times more

likely to develop dementia than people with a normal weight and abdominal

profile, she said.

Those who were both obese and big around the middle were 3.6 times - or a

whopping 260 per cent - more likely to develop dementia than those of normal

weight and belly size. That compares to an 80 per cent higher risk for people

who were overweight or obese but without so-called beer gut.

" So there's two messages here, " Whitmer said. " The first message is that if you

are normal (weight) and you have a large belly, your risk for dementia was about

the same as those who were overweight or obese who didn't have a large belly. "

" Now, if you are overweight or obese and you have a large belly, your risk

really goes up. "

" So this really nicely shows that the effect of the large belly was above and

beyond the effect of body mass index and, in particular, the magnitude of the

effect of the large belly got greater as you weighed more. "

The study involved 6,583 people in northern California, aged 40 to 45, who had

their abdominal fat measured between 1964 and 1973 and whose health records were

followed over time. An average of 36 years later, when participants were in

their 70s, 16 per cent had been diagnosed with dementia.

Whitmer said the kind of fat that settles in the belly, known as visceral fat,

has a different makeup and actions in the body than the type of fat packed on

elsewhere, called subcutaneous fat.

" And fat biologists know, that visceral fat, it is more lively, it is more

toxic, it is more metabolically active, " said Whitmer. " It secretes a lot of

hormones and inflammatory compounds. "

While only speculating, she suggests one or more of these inflammatory

substances may be able to cross into the brain and cause damage - just as they

may do to blood vessels and organs like the heart and pancreas.

" It's not a causal study, it's not a mechanistic study, " she said. " But I think

our findings suggest there is a pathway going on that is something intrinsic to

that belly size, to that belly fat, because we did take into account other

diseases that are highly correlated with belly size and highly correlated with

dementia. "

Dr. Jean-Pierre Despres, a specialist in obesity and cardiovascular disease at

Laval University, said he is not surprised to see a relationship between excess

abdominal fat and dementia.

" Obviously this is an association and you don't want to speculate too much on

the mechanism behind such associations, " Despres said Wednesday from Quebec

City.

" But if you think about the consequences of abdominal obesity, of having fat at

the wrong place, we know that having too much abdominal fat is associated with

what I call a minestrone soup of abnormalities, increasing the risk of Type 2

diabetes, but also increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease. "

" Now I'm learning today that on top of the risk of heart disease, the risk of

diabetes, this is one more complication to add to the expanding list, which

makes this extremely interesting, " said Despres, who was not involved in the

study.

While more research is needed to pin down exactly how having a paunch might

affect the brain, he said the study provides more evidence that having fat in

the wrong place is detrimental to health.

" It's not a matter of how fat you are, it's where the excess fat is located, "

said Despres, noting that a portly girth (roughly more than 94 centimetres in

men and 80-plus centimetres in women) and elevated blood fat (triglycerides)

suggests a build-up of visceral fat.

Dr. Cheryl Wellington, an associate professor of pathology and laboratory

medicine at the University of British Columbia, called the Neurology paper a

" landmark study that strengthens the connection between metabolic disturbances

and the onset of dementia. "

" What is really important about studies like this is that it actually provides

people with things that they can do to help lessen their risk of dementia in old

age, " she said from Vancouver.

" Taking good care of yourself in midlife is probably the biggest thing that you

can do to preempt dementia as much as possible later. So when you're in your 30s

and 40s and 50s, make sure you've got diet and exercise under control. "

Whitmer agreed that having too much visceral fat may be risky, but the good news

is it's a risk that can be modified.

" It is actually less stubborn than the subcutaneous fat, so you can get rid of

that fat with exercise and with diet. "

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Hey! I was helping mom do her " arm " exercises and she looked at me kindly

and said, " Did you know that people with big bellies are at more of a risk for

dementia? I saw it on T. V. last night " I thought she made that story up! And

yes, I have a " belly " , dang it!

Ciao! Pamela

**************Create a Home Theater Like the Pros. Watch the video on AOL

Home.

(http://home.aol.com/diy/home-improvement-eric-stromer?video=15 & ncid=aolhom00030\

000000001)

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Pam,

I have a big belly too! I hope to get rid of it soon. And I don't think we are

the only ones. Sounds like Courage was discussing hers too!

Only Sandie who eats chocolate all day and night doesn't have one. But she

works for UPS and must work it off! LOL

Hugs,

Donna R

Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years and 4th year in

a nh.

She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

Re:Belly Fat and Dementia

Hey! I was helping mom do her " arm " exercises and she looked at me kindly

and said, " Did you know that people with big bellies are at more of a risk for

dementia? I saw it on T. V. last night " I thought she made that story up! And

yes, I have a " belly " , dang it!

Ciao! Pamela

**************Create a Home Theater Like the Pros. Watch the video on AOL

Home.

(http://home.aol.com/diy/home-improvement-eric-stromer?video=15 & ncid=aolhom00030\

000000001)

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