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    Pot Bellies Linked to Heart
    Disease
    Even a moderate bulge at the waist increases the risk of calcium
    deposits in the arteries, scientists warn.

    Most of us rely on the bathroom scale to tell us when middle-aged
    spread is getting out of hand. It might be better to keep a tape measure
    at the ready.

    New research shows that adding several inches to the waist -- even if
    body weight still falls within a normal range -- markedly increases the
    risk of unhealthy plaque build-up in the arteries of the heart and the rest
    of the body.

    According to the study, the relationship of the waist measurement to the
    hip measurement was much more closely tied to early, hidden signs of
    heart disease than other common measures of obesity, such as body
    mass index (BMI) or the waist circumference alone. In other words, we
    may obsess about unsightly cellulite on our hips, but it's the pot belly we
    ought to worry about.

    “In our thirties and forties, we often gain three to four inches in the
    midsection,” said Dr James A. de Lemos, a professor of medicine and
    director of the Coronary Care Unit at the University of Texas
    Southwestern Medical Center. “It's a day-to-day, meal-to-meal battle, but
    it's worth fighting. Even a small pot belly puts us at higher risk when
    compared to a flat tummy.”

    For the study,  De Lemos and his colleagues examined data from the
    Dallas
    Heart Study, which is evaluating risk factors for heart disease in a large,
    multi-ethnic, urban population with a median age of 45.

    The new sub-study focused on a group of 2,744 participants who had
    non-invasive imaging tests to look for early signs of plaque build-up in
    the arteries,
    which signals an increased risk of developing heart  disease later in life.

    Electron-beam computed tomography (EBCT) was used to identify
    calcium deposits in the arteries of the heart. These deposits indicate the
    onset of atherosclerosis, or so-called hardening of the arteries, and can
    be detected years before a person experiences chest pain or has a
    heart attack. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to look for
    early signs of atherosclerosis in the walls of the aorta.

    Researchers then examined the relationship between body shape and
    early signs of arterial disease. They found that the likelihood of calcium
    being found in the arteries of the heart grew in direct proportion to
    increases in the waist-to-hip ratio (WHR).

    In addition, when they divided the WHR into five groups from smallest to
    largest, they found that people with the largest WHR were nearly twice
    as likely to have calcium deposits in their coronary arteries as those with
    the smallest WHR. The likelihood of atherosclerotic plaque in the aorta
    was three times as high in those with the largest WHR as compared to
    the smallest.

    The relationship between WHR and arterial plaque remained strong
    even after other risk factors, such as blood pressure, diabetes, age,
    smoking and high cholesterol levels were taken into account.

    “Middle-aged spread is not healthy,” De Lemos said. “We don’t have to
    clean our plates. It’s better to throw food out than add it to our waists.”

    Using the waist-to-hip measurement to gauge cardiovascular risk has
    certain clinical advantages, said Dr Raimund Erbel of the  West German
    Heart Center Essen.

    “The WHR can be easily measured, taking only a few moments and
    giving more precise information on the presence of coronary artery
    calcium than BMI or waist circumference,” Erbel said.

    “In addition, although BMI is used more often, it does not identify
    patients with central obesity, which seems to be related to the metabolic
    syndrome, insulin resistance and abnormal cholesterol levels.
    However, most important is that other measures of obesity did not
    discriminate beyond traditional risk factors, whereas WHR did.”

    Erbel said the likelihood of coronary artery calcium increases more with
    age in men than in women.

    "It may be that in an older population, in which the duration of risk factor
    exposure is longer and the likelihood of coronary artery calcium is
    higher, the association between obesity—as measured by BMI and
    waist circumference—and signs of early atherosclerosis is stronger,”
    Erbel said.

    The report was published in the Journal of the American College of
    Cardiology.
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