The obesity paradox in the US population

Recently a number of studies have found a lower risk of dying for obese individuals than for normal-weight individuals. The explanation for these paradoxical findings has not yet been identified. The objective was to assess whether this paradoxical pattern exists in the US population and whether it...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of clinical nutrition 2013-06, Vol.97 (6), p.1195-1200
1. Verfasser: GREENBERG, James A
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description Recently a number of studies have found a lower risk of dying for obese individuals than for normal-weight individuals. The explanation for these paradoxical findings has not yet been identified. The objective was to assess whether this paradoxical pattern exists in the US population and whether it can be explained by reverse causation. Survival analyses were used to calculate the RR of all-cause mortality for obesity by using data from 35,673 participants in NHANES I (1971-1975), NHANES II (1976-1980), and NHANES III (1988-1994), which reported 7087 deaths during 3 different 15-y follow-up periods. With normal weight as a referent, a lower relative mortality risk of obesity was found only in NHANES III and only among men with a wide variety of preexisting serious illnesses. For this subgroup, the relative mortality risks in NHANES I, II, and III were 2.22 (95% CI: 1.45, 3.40), 0.89 (95% CI: 0.70, 1.15), and 0.65 (95% CI: 0.47, 0.91), respectively. Whereas the mortality rate among seriously ill normal-weight men did not change significantly between NHANES I and III, it did decrease significantly among seriously ill obese men, suggesting that reverse causation was not responsible for the lower relative mortality risk among seriously ill obese men in NHANES III. Only obese NHANES male participants with a wide variety of serious illnesses experienced lower mortality risk than their normal-weight counterparts and only in NHANES III. Reverse causation seems unlikely to have played a role. These conclusions require confirmation.
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Whereas the mortality rate among seriously ill normal-weight men did not change significantly between NHANES I and III, it did decrease significantly among seriously ill obese men, suggesting that reverse causation was not responsible for the lower relative mortality risk among seriously ill obese men in NHANES III. Only obese NHANES male participants with a wide variety of serious illnesses experienced lower mortality risk than their normal-weight counterparts and only in NHANES III. Reverse causation seems unlikely to have played a role. 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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Aged
Biological and medical sciences
Body Mass Index
Body Weight
Causality
Cohort Studies
Feeding. Feeding behavior
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Mens health
Metabolic diseases
Middle Aged
Mortality
Multivariate Analysis
Nutrition Surveys
Obesity
Obesity - mortality
Proportional Hazards Models
Risk assessment
Risk Factors
Survival Analysis
United States
Vertebrates: anatomy and physiology, studies on body, several organs or systems
Young Adult
title The obesity paradox in the US population
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