Obesity and Cardiovascular Disease Risk: Research Update
- 1 July 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Cardiology in Review
- Vol. 9 (4) , 202-207
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00045415-200107000-00005
Abstract
The obesity epidemic has reached unprecedented proportions in Western society. Evidence continues to accumulate that obesity is associated with significant morbidity and mortality and in particular that it is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). The association of obesity with CVD and its risk factors, including hypertension, dyslipidemia, glucose intolerance, and impaired hemostasis is becoming more clearly understood. An increasing body of data indicates that risk factors tend to cluster in obese individuals and may act synergistically to increase these people’s risk for CVD. Individuals with disproportionate visceral adiposity are at significantly greater risk for CVD. Adult weight gain also underlies the development of many risk factors and augments the risk of CVD. Physicians can play a vital and active role in the prevention and treatment of obesity and overweight and thereby reduce patients’ CVD risk.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comorbidities of overweight and obesity: current evidence and research issuesMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1999
- The Disease Burden Associated With Overweight and ObesityJAMA, 1999
- Body-Mass Index and Mortality in a Prospective Cohort of U.S. AdultsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Obesity and Heart DiseaseCirculation, 1997
- Obesity and mortality: a review of the epidemiologic dataThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1997
- Body Weight and Mortality among WomenNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Increasing Prevalence of Overweight Among US AdultsJAMA, 1994
- Actual Causes of Death in the United StatesJAMA, 1993
- Weight and Thirty-Year Mortality of Men in the Framingham StudyAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1985
- Obesity as an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease: a 26-year follow-up of participants in the Framingham Heart Study.Circulation, 1983