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Belly Fat Good Predictor of Diabetes in MenBelly Fat is Good Predictor of Diabetes in MenNEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Overall obesity, measured by high body mass index (BMI) -- the height-to-weight ratio, and abdominal obesity, measured by a large waist circumference, each strongly and independently predict the risk of Type 2 diabetes in men, but abdominal obesity appears to be the better predictor, new research shows. "Both BMI and waist circumference are useful for assessing health risk and should be measured in clinical settings...whenever possible," the investigators say. But abdominal fat measured by waist circumference "can indicate a strong risk for diabetes whether or not a man is considered overweight or obese according to his BMI," lead author Dr. Youfa Wang added in a statement. In the study, investigators compared the predictive power of BMI, waist circumference, and waist-to-hip ratio for the development of Type 2 diabetes in 27,270 men participating in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. During 13 years of follow-up, a total of 884 men developed Type 2 diabetes, Wang, from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, and colleagues report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. According to the team, as waist circumference increased, so did the risk of developing diabetes, with the risk in men with the highest waist circumference (up to 158 centimeters) increasing by 12-fold, they report. A similar graduated risk was seen for waist-to-hip ratio and BMI, with the largest values associated with a 7-fold and 8-fold increased risk, respectively. "Our findings support the contention that the measurement of waist circumference should be used in clinical practice instead of waist-to-hip ratio," the investigators write. The study findings also suggest that the currently recommended cutoff for high waist circumference of 102 cm (40 inches) for men may need to be lowered to 95 cm. "Many of the men who developed Type 2 diabetes had measurements lower than the cutoff, Wang said, "and the risk associated with the waist circumference increased at a much lower level." SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, March 2005. Related ArticlesDiabetes Symptoms - You went to the doctor because you were dealing with nausea, weakness and having trouble breathing-otherwise you thought you were perfectly healthy. However, at your doctor's visit, your physician did some blood work, and before you could blink, you received the news that would change your lifestyle-permanently. The results were in, and those problems were not a lingering stomach virus, they were actually the symptoms of type 2 Diabetes. As you sat in shock, your doctor began discussing other diabetic symptoms and you realized you had experienced other symptoms of diabetes. Diabetes A1C Test - By examining the results of each diabetes a1c test, the diabetic and their physician are aware of actions and steps required to better control the diabetes; the closer a diabetes a1c test reads to 6-7% (an acceptable percentage in most blood glucose levels), the greater the chance that the conditions of onset diabetes are being managed. Eating Breakfast May Do a Heart Good - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Mom may have been right when she said breakfast is the most important meal of the day. A small study suggests that skipping that morning meal may be a bad move for the heart, and possibly the waistline. Moderate Drinking Appears to Cut Diabetes Risk - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Evidence continues to mount that moderate alcohol consumption may protect against the development of Type 2 diabetes. |
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