Tuesday, April 3, 2012

U.S. Obesity Epidemic Worse than Sreviously Selieved: Study


The scope of the obesity epidemic in the United States has been greatly underestimated, according to a study published Monday in the open access journal PLos one

Researchers found that the Body Mass Index (BMI) substantially under-diagnoses obesity when compared to the Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA) scan, a direct simultaneous measure of body fat, muscle mass, and bone density. The disparity is particularly significant for women of advancing age, those with high blood leptin levels, and the normal weight obese.

The study found that as many as 39 percent of Americans who are classified as overweight based on BMI are actually obese as measured by DXA.

“The BMI is an insensitive measure of obesity, prone to under- diagnosis,” said Eric Braverman, a medical specialist with the nongovernmental Place for Achieving Total Health, “while direct fat measurements are superior because they show distribution of body fat.”

Braverman and colleagues recognize the convenience, safety, and low cost of the BMI, yet agree that it is an outdated mathematical equation that needs to evolve in order to correctly evaluate body fat.
The authors also found that levels of leptin, a hormone protein, are strongly correlated to body fat. They suggest that, in the absence of DXA, leptin levels may be used in conjunction with BMI to provide a more accurate measure of adiposity, and provide a leptin-adjusted BMI table to do so.

Source: Tempo News PHOTO Credit - (Obesity Epidemic)