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Waist Size Indicates Risk of Diabetes
LONDON (Reuters) - Waist size is a good indicator
of a person's risk of becoming insulin resistant, an early
stage in the development of diabetes and heart disease,
researchers said on Friday.
Waist circumference is already recognised
as an independent sign of potential cardiovascular disease
but Swedish scientists said it can also be used to gauge
sensitivity to insulin.
"A waist circumference of less than
100 cm (39 inches) excludes individuals of both sexes from
being at risk of being insulin resistant," Hans Wahrenberg,
of the Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, said
in a study reported online by the British Medical Journal.
People who suffer from insulin resistance
do not use insulin properly. They may have blood levels
of glucose that are higher than normal but not yet in the
range indicating pre-diabetes, which raises the risk of
developing type 2 diabetes.
Excess weight is a leading and avoidable
risk factor for type 2 diabetes.
The Swedish researchers studied 2,746 men
and women aged 18 to 72 who had waists ranging from 65-150
cm. They measured their height, weight, waist and hip sizes
and took a blood sample to test insulin sensitivity.
They found that waist size was a strong predictor
of insulin resistance.
"Waist circumference is a simple tool
to exclude insulin resistance and to identify those at greatest
risk," said Wahrenberg.
SOURCE: British Medical Journal, April
186, 2005
2005 Reuters Health
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