Health & Medical Diabetes

Obesity Paradox: Thin Not in for Type 2 Diabetes?

Obesity Paradox: Thin Not in for Type 2 Diabetes?

Obesity Paradox: Thin Not in for Type 2 Diabetes?


Normal Weight in People Diagnosed With Type 2 Diabetes Tied to Higher Risk of Early Death

Aug. 7, 2012 -- People who are overweight or obese when they are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes appear to live longer than people whose body weight is normal when their disease is detected, a new study shows.

Obesity increases the risks for illness and early death. Despite this, doctors have long puzzled over why bigger patients with certain chronic diseases seem to fare better than those who are thin. This so-called "obesity paradox" has been noted in patients with kidney disease, heart failure, and high blood pressure.

The new study, which is published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggests the protective effect of a higher body mass index (BMI) may also extend to people with type 2 diabetes. BMI is a measure of size that accounts for both height and weight.

"This was unexpected given the close association of diabetes with obesity," says researcher Mercedes R. Carnethon, PhD, an associate professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

Excess body fat worsens the body's ability to use insulin properly, which affects blood sugar control. People with diabetes who are overweight are routinely advised to lose weight to help keep their disease in check.

Carnethon cautions that this study doesn't mean that people with diabetes who are overweight should abandon their weight loss efforts.

Instead, experts say the study suggests that people who are normal weight when they are diagnosed may be at increased risk of poor health outcomes, though doctors don't fully understand why.

"If you are normal weight, you may be at higher risk from diabetes, especially if your fitness status is not so good," says Hermes Florez, MD, PhD. Florez is the director of the division of epidemiology and population health sciences at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine. He wrote an editorial on the study but was not involved in the research.

"It's not just the issue of fatness. It's also the issue of fitness," he says.


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