Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 Interesting, but scary article... Marilyn > > How Does Fat Kill Thee? Many Ways > Associated Press > > Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63425,00.html > > 02:11 PM May. 11, 2004 PT > > Research into the biology of fat is turning up some surprising new > insights about how obesity kills. The weight of the evidence: It's the > toxic mischief of the flesh itself. > > Experts have realized for decades that large people die young, and the > explanation long seemed obvious. Carrying around all those extra pounds > must put a deadly strain on the heart and other organs. > > > Obvious but wrong, it turns out. While the physical burden contributes > to arthritis and sleep apnea, among other things, it is a minor hazard > compared with the complex and insidious damage wrought by the oily, > yellowish globs of fat that cover human bodies like never before. > > A series of recent discoveries suggests that all fat-storage cells > churn out a stew of hormones and other chemical messengers that > fine-tune the body's energy balance. But when spewed in vast amounts by > cells swollen to capacity with fat, they assault many organs in ways > that are bad for health. > > The exact details are still being worked out, but scientists say there > is no doubt this flux of biological cross talk hastens death from heart > disease, strokes, diabetes and cancer, diseases that are especially > common among the obese. > > " When we look at fat tissue now, we see it's not just a passive depot > of fat, " says Dr. Rudolph Leibel of Columbia University. " It's an > active manufacturer of signals to other parts of the body. " > > The first real inkling that fat is more than just inert blubber was > the discovery 10 years ago of the substance leptin. Scientists were > amazed to find that this static-looking flesh helps maintain itself by > producing a chemical that regulates appetite. > > Roughly 25 different signaling compounds -- with names like resistin > and adiponectin -- are now known to be made by fat cells, Leibel > estimates, and many more undoubtedly will be found. > > " There is an explosion of information about just what it is and what > it does, " Dr. Spiegel, director of the National Institute of > Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, says of fat. " It is a > tremendously dynamic organ. " > > Fat tissue is now recognized to be the body's biggest endocrine organ, > and its sheer volume is impressive even in normal-size people. A trim > woman is typically 30 percent fat, a man 15 percent. That is enough > fuel to keep someone alive without eating for three months. > > The fat cell's main job is to store our excess calories as fat. When > people grow obese, their fat cells swell with fat and can plump up to > three times normal size. As very overweight people get fatter still, > they may also layer on many more fat cells. > > The problem is the volume of chemicals these oversize cells churn out, > says Dr. Bray of Louisiana State University. " The big cell > secretes more of everything that it secreted when it was small. When > you get more of these things, they are not good for you. " > > Many scientists are trying to learn exactly what these excess > secretions do that is so harmful. The answers will help explain -- and > perhaps offer solutions to -- the real tragedy of the obesity epidemic, > its disastrous effect on health. > > Obesity is a huge and growing killer, in the United States just > slightly behind smoking. Moderately obese people live two to five years > less than normal-size folks. For the severely obese, the reduction in > life span may be five to 10 years. > > By far the biggest single threat of obesity is heart disease. Someone > with a body mass index over 30 has triple the usual risk. Scientists > can visualize many ways that fat cells' chemical flood contributes to > heart attacks, heart failure and cardiac arrest. > > For instance, it has long been known that weight increases blood > pressure. Once doctors thought this was a matter of physics, the force > needed to push blood through the many more yards of blood vessels that > nourish the extra flesh. > > But now it is clear that fat can trigger high blood pressure by making > blood vessels narrow in several chemical ways. For instance, it > produces a substance called angiotensinogen that is a powerful > constrictor. At the same time, it stimulates the sympathetic nerves to > squeeze the circulatory system. And that may just be the beginning. > > " It's a very complicated system, and the more we learn about it, the > more complicated it becomes, " says Dr. Xavier Pi-Sunyer, head of > obesity research at St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York > City. > > One of the clearest hazards of overfilled fat cells is their influence > on the body's production and use of insulin, the hormone that instructs > the muscle to burn energy and the fat cells to store it. Oversize fat > cells blunt the insulin message, in part by leaking fat into the > bloodstream. So the pancreas must compensate by making more insulin and > other proteins. > > Scientists now understand that increasing insulin levels -- part of a > condition called insulin resistance -- are particularly harmful. They > can directly damage the walls of arteries and lead to clogging. > > That leaking fat may also infiltrate the heart muscle, contributing to > congestive heart failure. Misplaced deposits of fat can also ruin the > liver and have become the second-leading reason for liver transplants > after hepatitis B. > > Fat cells churn out a variety of proteins that cause inflammation, > too. These may be especially destructive to the gunky buildups in the > arteries, causing them to burst and triggering heart attacks and > strokes. > > These inflammatory proteins and other fat-driven chemicals, such as > growth hormones, may also contribute to one of the less-appreciated > consequences of obesity -- cancer. > > " There is now conclusive evidence that obesity causes some cancers and > strong evidence that it contributes to a wide variety of others, " says > Dr. Thun, epidemiology chief at the American Cancer Society. > > The cancer society estimates that staying trim could eliminate 90,000 > U.S. cancer deaths a year. Among the varieties most clearly linked to > weight are cancer of the breast, uterus, colon, kidney, esophagus, > pancreas and gallbladder. > > The best evidence of how obesity causes malignancy is in breast cancer > in older women. When the ovaries shut down after menopause, fat tissue > becomes the primary producer of estrogen, which in turn can fuel the > growth of breast tumors. > > The heavier women are when diagnosed with breast cancer, the more > likely they are to die from the disease, says Dr. Holmes of > Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital. " Presumably it's because their > cancers are dependent on estrogen, and heavier women have more > estrogen. " > > Still, big-ticket killers like heart disease and cancer only start the > long list of obesity's health ills. Among other things, obese people > are more prone to depression, gallstones, even dying when in car > accidents. > > Says Dr. Jensen of the Mayo Clinic, " There are so many ways > that obesity can kill you. 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