Archive for the ‘Healthy weight’ Category

Overeating to blame for insulin weight gain

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Sunday, Apr. 6, 2008; 4:26 AM

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Overeating is likely the greatest contributor to the weight gain that can occur when a diabetic begins using insulin, new research suggests.

However, overeating can be difficult for doctors to recognize since diabetics may underreport their food intake, according to the findings in the journal Diabetes Care.

Dr. Miriam Ryan, from CHU Angers, France and colleagues assessed the impact of food intake on weight gain in 23 type 1 and 23 type 2 diabetic adults starting insulin therapy.

During the study, the type 1 diabetics gained weight gained an average of 10.3 pounds and type 2 diabetics gained an average of 4.0. The weight gain could not be explained by a slowing of the body’s metabolism, decrease in physical activity, or increase in sugar in the urine, leaving the authors to conclude that it was primarily due to overeating.

They also report that accurate assessment of calorie intake was “severely hampered by the underreporting of food intake, with (reported calorie) intakes being insufficient to meet even (the body’s lowest) energy requirements.”

Overeating during insulin therapy may be a response to low blood sugar episodes, the researchers speculate.

The underreporting of food intake in diabetic patients “requires more concerted effort to detect its presence and magnitude,” Ryan and colleagues conclude.

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, March 2008.

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Normal Weight Doesn’t Always Equal Healthy Weight

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
Wednesday, Apr. 2, 2008; 4:00 AM
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

TUESDAY, April 1 (HealthDay News) — Despite appearances to the contrary, more than half of normal-weight Americans have a high percentage of body fat. And, like their overweight contemporaries, this makes them susceptible to heart disease, diabetes and other metabolic disorders, a new study says.

Men whose body fat is greater than 20 percent and women whose body fat is greater than 30 percent are suffering from “normal weight obesity,” the study authors said, even though their weight may be normal for their size.

“The prevalence of people with a high amount of body fat despite a normal weight is relatively high,” said lead researcher Dr. Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, a cardiologist with the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “Many of these people have metabolic abnormalities.”

These findings should alert doctors that body weight isn’t the only way to protect against health problems caused by excess pounds, Lopez-Jimenez said. Even normal-weight people should be advised to exercise and eat a healthful diet to reduce their level of fat, especially belly fat, he added.

The findings were expected to be presented Tuesday at the American College of Cardiology’s annual meeting, in Chicago.

For the study, Lopez-Jimenez and his colleagues collected data on 2,127 people who participated in the U.S. government’s Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Specifically, the researchers looked at risk factors for heart disease, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome, a precursor of diabetes.

The researchers found that 61 percent of the participants had levels of body fat that indicated “normal weight obesity.” In addition, Lopez-Jimenez’s group found changes in blood chemistry that can affect heart and metabolic health, including high cholesterol; high levels of leptin, a hormone found in fat and other tissues that’s involved in appetite regulation; and high rates of metabolic syndrome.

Lopez-Jimenez said the study shows that just because your weight may be normal for your size, it doesn’t mean you aren’t at risk for heart disease and diabetes.

“If you have a normal weight, don’t feel that everything is just OK,” Lopez-Jimenez said. “If you have an excess amount of fat, you might have metabolic abnormalities as well,” he said.

One expert agrees that normal body weight is not synonymous with good health.

“Body weight is a very blunt instrument; it is not a reliable gauge of obesity, or health, at the individual level,” said Dr. David L. Katz, director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine. “For example, a muscular man may have a very high body weight, yet be perfectly fit and healthy. Many people whose body weight is in the normal range are anything but.”

And some people are vulnerable to weight gain in all the wrong places, such as in and around the vital organs of the abdomen, notably the liver, Katz said.

“Even a small amount of extra fat where it matters most can wreak metabolic havoc, increasing risk for diabetes and heart disease, while leaving you with a body weight that looks perfectly innocent,” Katz said. “Excess body fat in the belly is a menace, whatever your weight. This study should sensitize patients and providers alike to this concern.”

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