Reuters Health Information: Overweight young men may face high liver disease risk later in life
Overweight young men may face high liver disease risk later in life
Last Updated: 2016-06-23
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - Being overweight at 18 to 20 years old
may signal that a man is headed for severe liver disease decades
later, according to a large, long-term study from Sweden.
Researchers followed more than 44,000 men conscripted for
military service in 1969 and 1970, and found those who were
overweight as young men were 64 percent more likely to have
serious liver problems and liver-related deaths in the next 40
years compared to normal weight counterparts.
"Most likely, these teens already had non-alcoholic fatty
liver disease (NAFLD) at the start of the study, or developed it
down the road," said lead author Dr. Hannes Hagstrom of the
Center for Digestive Diseases at Karolinska Institute in
Stockholm. "We know that some persons with NAFLD do develop
severe liver disease."
The researchers used national records on 44,248 Swedish men
conscripted for military service, which requires a full physical
exam, and tracked their health outcomes in medical registries up
to 2009.
By that time, 393 men had been diagnosed with severe liver
disease, including reduced liver function, cirrhosis or
liver-related death. Those who were overweight as teens were at
the greatest risk, even after the analysis accounted for alcohol
and tobacco use, according to the June 16 report in Journal of
Hepatology.
About 7 percent of the men had been overweight in their
youth, meaning they had a body mass index (BMI) between 25 and
29.9. BMI is a measure of weight relative to height, and the
range between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered normal. BMI of 30 or
above is considered obese.
The highest risk for severe liver disease later on in life
was alcohol consumption of more than 3.5 bottles of wine per
week, Dr. Hagström noted.
"However, it is already known that alcohol causes liver
disease," he told Reuters Health by email. "What's new here is
that being overweight/obese was associated with an increased
risk independent of how much alcohol these young men were
drinking.
"Other significant risk factors were smoking, use of
narcotics, self-rated health, cardiovascular fitness and high
blood pressure," Dr. Hagstrom said.
The results would likely have been similar for women but
that's not necessarily clear in this study, he said.
A similar study of men conscripted into military service in
Sweden, also published June 16 in European Heart Journal, found
that young men at the high end of the normal BMI range may have
a higher risk of heart failure later in life compared to their
peers at the low end of normal BMI.
"Those in high normal range don't need to be concerned
because (heart failure) is still very rare," said lead author
Dr. Annika Rosengren, professor of medicine at the Sahlgrenska
Academy in Gothenburg. "The absolute risk is still very low."
But in Sweden, heart failure is becoming more common among
people younger than 45, and may continue to do so as overweight
also increases, she told Reuters Health. Younger people with
heart failure are frequently misdiagnosed as having asthma,
since both can cause shortness of breath, she said.
"There's already an incentive to try to decrease the obesity
epidemic, this is just another reason for doing it," she said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/28QZ0ch
J. Hepatol. June 2016.
http://bit.ly/28Jy3r6
Eur. Heart J. June 2016.
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