Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Obesity silently damages heart

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Nov, 2014 12:20 PM
    Obese people without an overt manifestation of heart disease experience silent cardiac damage that fuels risk of heart failure in the future, with new research suggesting that obesity is an independent driver of heart muscle damage.
     
    The findings challenge the commonly held belief that cardiovascular diseases seen in severely overweight people are driven by diabetes and high blood pressure, both well-known cardiac risk factors and both occurring frequently among the obese.
     
    "Obesity is a well-known 'accomplice' in the development of heart disease, but our findings suggest it may be a solo player that drives heart failure independently of other risk factors that are often found among those with excess weight," said Chiadi Ndumele, lead investigator and assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University in the US.
     
    Specifically, the research showed that obese people had elevated levels of a heart enzyme known as troponin T, released by injured heart muscle cells.
     
    Increases in levels of this enzyme corresponded to an increase in people's body mass index (BMI) - a measure of body fat based on a person's weight-to-height ratio. Levels of the enzyme rose proportionally as BMI went up.
     
    Troponin T is the gold standard for diagnosing acute or recent heart attacks and is widely used in emergency rooms to test patients with chest pain and other symptoms suggestive of a heart attack.
     
    For the study, investigators measured the BMIs and cardiac troponin levels of more than 9,500 heart disease-free men and women, aged 53 to 75, living in Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina and Minnesota.
     
    The researchers then tracked the participants' health for more than 12 years.
     
    The findings appeared online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Heart Failure.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning
    Cinnamon can not only tickle your taste buds, the ancient cooking spice is also an effective anti-bacterial agent and can help prevent some of the most serious food-borne...

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver
    For people suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, eating probiotics for a month can help diminish the accumulation of fat in the liver...

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite
    You may soon look at cat poop in a different light as it may hold the key to cancer cure.

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite

    Gene that mediates ageing identified

    Gene that mediates ageing identified
    In what could point towards the possibility of one day using therapeutics to combat ageing, researchers have found in animal models that a single gene plays a surprising role in ageing that can be detected early in development.

    Gene that mediates ageing identified

    Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations

    Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations
    Starvation may affect the health of at least the next three generations, says a study.

    Starvation effects pass on to next 3 generations

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients
    When a medical emergency strikes, instinct tells us to go to the nearest hospital quickly.

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients