Health Library.com
MD Consult
MD Consult is the world's largest online medical library



This site exists because of donors like you. Thanks !


Health Videos
Free Animated Health Videos for health education


Ask The Librarian
Find Out Everything Your Doctor Would Tell You -- If Only He Had the Time !


HELP in the News
Press article of HELP


Guided Tour of HELP
Take a Video Tour of HELP !

Have a look at the pictures of the library


Search
Search the entire Healthlibrary.com site. The search is powered by Google.


The patient's Doctor
Helping patients and doctors to talk to each other!


Support Us
Find out how your help can HELP to improve its services.


Book Reviews
Here we will present you with regular Book Reviews of our latest arrivals.


HELP Catalog
You can now search our catalog of over 8000 books and 10000 pamphlets online sitting at home !


Guestbook
Would you like to read what others have to say. We would love to hear from you...

Also read the Visitor's Comments


Seminar
HELP initiates a seminar and releases two books on improving the doctor patient relationship


Help Talks
HELP Talks are held on the 1st & 3rd Saturdays of every month at 1pm on a wide range of health topics.


Favourites
This section presents your favourite consumer health site


Limca Book of Records

News
Obesity paradox" seen in range of heart ills

June 13, 2007
www.reutershealth.com

Among men with symptoms of heart disease, those who are obese tend to live longer than their normal-weight counterparts, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that among nearly 6,900 male veterans assessed for symptoms of heart disease, those who were obese were less likely to die over the next 7.5 years compared with normal-weight men.

Past research has linked obesity to longer survival among people with heart failure, a chronic condition in which the heart muscle is too weak to pump enough blood to meet the body's needs. Some studies also suggest that obese patients fare better following heart bypass surgery.

Now the new findings, published in The American Journal of Medicine, suggest that this so-called "obesity paradox" extends to other heart disease patients as well.

The study does not, however, mean that obesity is a health boon, stress Dr. Paul McAuley and his colleagues at the VA Palo Alto Health Care System in California. Obesity is linked to a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes, heart disease and other illnesses.

A lifetime of obesity might have different effects on longevity, they speculate.

It's also not clear that obesity, per se, confers a survival advantage in heart disease. One recent study found that the obesity paradox might be explained by doctors' tendency to treat obese heart disease patients more aggressively.

The current findings are based on a follow-up of 6,876 men who were referred for exercise stress testing due to possible heart disease symptoms. Over an average of 7.5 years, 23 percent of the men died.

After the researchers accounted for patients' fitness levels on the exercise test, as well as heart risk factors, such as high blood pressure and diabetes, they found that obese men were 35 percent less likely to die during the study period than were normal-weight men.

Because the study group consisted of older men with heart disease symptoms, the findings may not be broadly relevant, McAuley and his colleagues point out. It's not known, for example, whether in a group of initially healthy people, obese individuals would tend to live longer.

More studies, the researchers conclude, are needed to fully understand the reasons for the obesity paradox.