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Bhartiya No. 1 (Nationalist)     15 September 2010

Physical Activity Reduces Obesity!!

With obesity is growing worldwide and has started taking ugly shape. Also it has become matter of great concern, especially child obesity.

As experts says/suggest that ‘DO NOT GO FOR DIETING”, rather try to maintain negative energy balance, i.e. burn more calorie than the intake.

Here in this thread I will post all the materials which I will encounter, related with obesity.

Below is the article related with this appeared in The Hindu,

Physical activity can reduce genetic obesity by 40 per cent

Our Bureau

 

AP BEYOND GENE: Physical activity attenuates the genetic influence on BMI.

 

 

New findings from a study suggest that the genetic predisposition to obesity can be reduced by an average of 40 per cent through increased physical activity. Although the whole population can benefit from a physically active lifestyle, in part through reduced obesity risk, the study shows that individuals with a genetic predisposition to obesity can benefit even more. The study was published in PLoS Medicine

The authors used a cohort study of 20,430 people living in Norwich, UK and examined 12 different genetic variants which are known to increase the risk of obesity. The researchers tested how many of these variants each study participants had inherited from either parent.

They then assessed the overall genetic susceptibility to obesity by summing the number of variants inherited into a ‘genetic predisposition score.'

Most individuals inherited between 10 and 13 variants, but some had inherited more than 17 variants, while others fewer than 6. In addition the researchers assessed occupational and leisure-time physical activities in each individual by using a validated self-administered questionnaire.

The researchers then used modelling techniques to examine whether a higher ‘genetic predisposition score' was associated with a higher body mass index (BMI)/obesity risk and, most importantly, they also tested whether a physically active lifestyle could attenuate the genetic influence on BMI and obesity risk.

The researchers found that each additional genetic variant in the score was associated with an increase in BMI equivalent to 445g in body weight for a person 1.70 m tall, and the size of this effect was greater in inactive people than in active people.

Furthermore, in the total sample each additional obesity-susceptibility variant increased the odds of obesity by 1.1-fold.

However, the increased odds per variant for obesity risk were 40 per cent lower in physically active individuals compared to physically inactive individuals.

Source/Link:

https://www.thehindu.com/health/fitness/article607437.ece



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 1 Replies

Bhartiya No. 1 (Nationalist)     15 September 2010

Here is the Obesity defined by WHO (World Health Organization)

Obesity

Overweight and obesity are defined as abnormal or excessive fat accumulation that presents a risk to health. A crude population measure of obesity is the body mass index (BMI), a person’s weight (in kilograms) divided by the square of his or her height (in metres). A person with a BMI of 30 or more is generally considered obese. A person with a BMI equal to or more than 25 is considered overweight.

Overweight and obesity are major risk factors for a number of chronic diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Once considered a problem only in high income countries, overweight and obesity are now dramatically on the rise in low- and middle-income countries, particularly in urban settings.

Source/Link:

https://www.who.int/topics/obesity/en/


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