A week ago, I mentioned a paper that hypothesized that:
obesity protects the body from the effects of overeating by providing somewhere safe to deposit the dietary deluge of fat and sugar, which in excess is toxic to many body tissues.
Today on Obesity Panacea, Travis explains how being able to store fat subcutaneously rather than viscerally might delay metabolic syndrome.
And now there’s this study,
While obesity puts people at risk for a whole host of chronic illnesses, including heart disease, there’s a least one situation in which extra pounds appear to provide a health advantage.
Oddly, once someone has already had a heart attack, obesity seems to confer protection against further heart problems, a new study suggests.
The results show that among 1,231 heart failure patients (those who have already had a heart attack), underweight, normal weight and overweight (but not obese) individuals had a 76 percent increase in risk of sudden cardiac death compared with obese patients.
Now, I’m only a lay person, but as far as I know, heart failure is a condition on its own and doesn’t describe “those who have already had a heart attack,” but whether these people have heart failure or previously had a heart attack, these researchers have found that, in this population, obese patients are at a reduced risk of sudden cardiac death.
Could these two be related? As one of the researchers from the second study mentions:
Obese patients are hard on their bodies; many don’t eat right, don’t exercise, and many smoke … If their bodies are surviving this bad treatment then perhaps they are better equipped, from a genetic standpoint, to live with heart failure.
Or maybe they did less damage to critical organs because the problematic elements of their diet (sugars including fructose? omega 6s?) were being shuttled off into accommodating fat cells.
And then there’s this, from Travis’ colleague Peter:
this recent study showed that weight loss of 15% or more was associated with an increased risk of death from all causes among overweight men and among overweight and obese women
Now, I think there could be lots of explanations for this latter finding, as Peter notes as well. Flawed study, effects of yo-yo dieting, weight loss thru crash dieting or without change to healthful diet, etc.
But is it a total stretch to think that maybe there’s another reason our bodies try to hold onto that fat? Well, I can’t imagine that’s the case. Just seems a curious few pieces of a puzzle!
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