Understanding Heart Disease Cardiovascular Diseases  

Prevalence of cardiometabolic risk factors, especially dyslipidemia, obesity and high central adiposity, may place women at higher risk for cardiovascular disease.

Erin D. Michos, MD, MHS, assistant professor of medicine in the division of cardiology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, is calling for women with a waistline measurement ¡İ35 inches to get an annual check-up and detailed risk assessment for heart disease.

¡°Physicians and others have unfortunately become too accustomed to seeing heavyset people, and there is a risk that we overlook or dismiss being overweight and obesity as a potential and future source of heart problems,¡± Michos said in a press release. ¡°Even if the problems are not evident now, it is more important to start screening women at a younger age to forego heart problems late in life.¡±

Researchers from various U.S. sites conducted a study to identify the prevalence and awareness of cardiovascular disease risk factors, obesity and coronary heart disease risk classification among 8,936 women who participated in the 2006 Sister to Sister National Woman¡¯s Heart Day event. The mean age of participants was 49 years.

Waistline was a predictor

¡°Abdominal obesity, in particular, was associated with a more adverse lipid profile and elevated blood glucose,¡± Michos told Endocrine Today. ¡°Thus, waist circumference in women may be a more important marker of obesity than weight or even BMI.¡±

Thirty-nine percent of participants were overweight (BMI 25-30), 35% were obese (BMI ¡İ30 kg/m2) and 55% had a waist heart disease circumference ¡İ35 in. As classified by the Framingham Risk Score, 85% of women were low risk, 6% were intermediate risk and 9% were high risk.

When waist circumference was included, 59% of low-risk women and 50% of intermediate-risk women understanding heart disease had one or two risk factors; 19% of low-risk women and 41% of intermediate-risk women had ¡İ3 risk factors, according to the study.

¡°Women who exercise and put on muscle mass might feel frustrated by not seeing their weight change on the scale, but if they measure their waist circumference and see that they are understanding heart disease losing inches there, then they are making a difference in reducing their heart disease risk, even if their overall weight is not changing too much,¡± Michos said.

Among women without a previous diagnosis of dyslipidemia, 48% were given new diagnoses. Among women without a previous diagnosis understanding heart diseaseof hypertension, 7% were given new diagnoses. The participants were often unaware of risk factors on screening.

¡°I urge all women to ¡®know their numbers,¡¯ which not only includes blood pressure, cholesterol heart profile and glucose, but also BMI and waist circumference,¡± Michos said. ¡°The best intervention is prevention.¡± ¨C by Christen Haigh



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