Love handles put the squeeze on lungs


PARIS, Mar 9, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Belly fat is strongly associated with
decreased lung function, sex, body mass index and other complications,
researchers in France said.

Lead author Dr. Natalie Leone of French National Institute for Health and
Medical Research and colleagues analyzed health information on more that 120,000
people from the Paris Investigations Preventives et Cliniques Center and
assessed demographic background, smoking history, alcohol consumption, as well
as lung function, including forced expiratory volume in one second and forced
vital capacity, or the total expiratory volume with respect to body mass index,
waist circumference and other measures of metabolic health.

Abdominal obesity was defined as having a waist circumference of greater than 35
inches for women and 40 inches for men.

"After adjustment for age, sex, BMI, smoking status, alcohol consumption,
leisure time physical activity and cardiovascular history, metabolic syndrome
remained independently associated with lung function impairment," Leone said in
a statement. "We found a positive independent relationship between lung function
impairment and metabolic syndrome due mainly to abdominal obesity."

The findings are published in the American Thoracic Society's American Journal
of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.



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Copyright 2009 by United Press International

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