Body Mass Index
found useless because it does not consider body composition
New research published in The Lancet medical journal suggests
that the Body Mass Index (BMI) system of classifying body weight
may be inaccurate for assessing the risk of dying prematurely
from heart disease.
The BMI, which classifies people as "underweight," "normal
weight," "overweight" or "obese," is
calculated by dividing a person's weight by their height squared.
However, researchers say that because the BMI does not take into
account body composition -- whether or not excess weight is fat
or muscle -- it is not an accurate measure of predicting early
death for heart patients.
Researchers from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., examined
data from 40 studies involving 250,000 people with heart disease,
and found that patients identified as "overweight" according
to BMI standards survived longer than "normal" weight
patients. The researchers believe that because muscle weighs
more than fat, many physically fit people are classified as "overweight," when
in reality they are less likely to die young than a "normal" weight
individual whose excess weight is mostly fat.
The study's lead researcher, Dr. Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, says
the study's aim was not to prove that obesity isn't harmful,
but that measuring risk of heart disease should come from BMI
combined with other body composition measures, such as waist-to-hip
ratio, which calculates the amount of abdominal fat. Such fat
-- called visceral fat -- packs in around the organs in the abdomen
and releases acids that increase the risk of heart disease, high
blood pressure and high blood sugar.
"When assessing the risk of developing coronary heart disease,
or dying from it, what really matters is how much fat you are
carrying in your abdomen. BMI is related to, but is not, an absolute
measurement of abdominal fat," says Judy O'Sullivan, a spokeperson
for the British Heart Foundation. "The most important thing
to consider is your body shape and weight. Eating less and being
more active is an effective way of controlling both and improving
your heart health." |