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Obesity, depression provide double-whammy
to heart
Posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2003
Obesity and depression may work together to
provoke the chronic low-level inflammation associated with atherosclerosis and
increased risk of heart disease, according to a new report in the journal Brain,
Behavior and Immunity. Among a large group of German men ages 45 to 74, obese
men had significantly higher concentrations of a protein called CRP compared
with non-obese men. CRP serves as a signal of artery inflammation and high
levels of the protein may be a good predictor of future heart disease.
From Health
Behavior News Service:
OBESITY, DEPRESSION TEAM UP TO INCREASE HEART-ENDANGERING INFLAMMATION
Obesity and depression may work together to provoke the chronic low-level
inflammation associated with atherosclerosis and increased risk of heart
disease, according to a new report in the journal Brain, Behavior and Immunity.
Among a large group of German men ages 45 to 74, obese men had significantly
higher concentrations of a protein called CRP compared with non-obese men. CRP
serves as a signal of artery inflammation and high levels of the protein may be
a good predictor of future heart disease.
And depression seems to add to obese men's heart woes: CRP levels were higher in
the most depressed obese men than in the less depressed obese men, according to
Karl-Heinz Ladwig, Ph.D., of the GSF National Research Center for Environment
and Health and colleagues.
Depression did not affect CRP levels among non-obese men, however, suggesting
that a combination of obesity and depression may be more risky for some men.
"We cannot provide a convincing explanation why the association between CRP
and depression was much stronger in obese than in non-obese participants.
However, it may be that both conditions — obesity and depression — share a
common ground which, in consequence, makes depressed, obese subjects in
particular susceptible for coronary heart disease," Ladwig says.
The association between obesity and depression remained strong even after
accounting for other factors that can affect CRP levels, including smoking,
alcohol consumption and physical activity, according to the researchers.
Twenty-three percent of the 3,205 men included in the study were identified as
obese. On the whole, the group of obese men was not any more depressed than the
non-obese group, Ladwig says.
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