Times Colonist

Pot belly can be risky even if weight OK

- LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — A pot belly can be a bad thing — even if you’re not considered overweight.

New research suggests normal-weight people who carry their fat at their waistlines may be at higher risk of death over the years than overweight or obese people whose fat is more concentrat­ed on the hips and thighs.

The study signals the distributi­on of fat matters whatever the scale says.

“If the waist is larger than your hips, you’re at increased risk for disease,” said Dr. Samuel Klein, an obesity specialist at Washington University School of Medicine at St. Louis, who wasn’t involved in the new research.

It also has implicatio­ns for advising patients whose body mass index or BMI, the standard measure for weight and height, puts them in the normal range despite a belly bulge.

“We see this with patients every day: ‘My weight is fine, I can eat whatever I want,’ ” said study senior author Dr. Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, preventive cardiology chief at the Mayo Clinic. “These results really challenge that.”

Abdominal fat — an appleshape­d figure — has long been considered more worrisome than fat that settles on the hips and below, the so-called pear shape. Risk increases for men if their waist circumfere­nce is larger than 40 inches, and 35 inches for women.

Still, doctors typically focus more on BMI than waistlines; after all, girth tends to increase as weight does.

But a BMI in the normal range may not give the full story for people who are thin but not fit, with more body fat than muscle, or who change shape as they get older and lose muscle, Lopez-Jimenez said.

His study analyzed what’s called waist-to-hip ratio, dividing the waist circumfere­nce by the hip measuremen­t.

There are different cutoffs, but a ratio greater than 1 means a bigger middle.

Researcher­s checked a government survey that tracked about 15,000 men and women with different BMIs — normal weight, overweight and obese. More than 3,200 died over 14 years.

At every BMI level, people with thicker middles had a higher risk of death than those with trimmer waists, the researcher­s reported in Annals of Internal Medicine.

In the study, 11 per cent of men and three per cent of women were normal weight but had an elevated waist-to-hip ratio. Surprising­ly, they were at greater risk — for men, roughly twice the risk — than more pear-shaped overweight or obese people.

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