Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health
The prevalence of obesity is rapidly increasing worldwide. One-thirds of world population is suffering from the deleterious effects of excessive fat and adipose tissue in their body. At the same time, the average life expectancy is becoming higher and higher every decade. Therefore, living healthy a...
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Korean Diabetes Association
2018-01-01
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doaj-7f12244fc50b452ba6d048f81bb9e8972020-11-24T23:37:59ZengKorean Diabetes AssociationDiabetes & Metabolism Journal2233-60792233-60872018-01-01421192510.4093/dmj.2018.42.1.19Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular HealthEun-Jung Rhee0Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.The prevalence of obesity is rapidly increasing worldwide. One-thirds of world population is suffering from the deleterious effects of excessive fat and adipose tissue in their body. At the same time, the average life expectancy is becoming higher and higher every decade. Therefore, living healthy and longer is the dream for everyone. Simply being obese is not the primary cause for the consequence of obesity; rather, the depot where the fat is accumulated, is the primary key for the deleterious effects of obesity. Results from historical research suggest that visceral fat increases the risk for cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, such as diabetes, myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke, not subcutaneous fat. Therefore, body mass index (BMI), which reflects body weight relative to height might not reflect the appropriate size of metabolic burden of fat in our body. In contrast, waist circumference, which reflects abdominal obesity, would mirror the metabolic burden of fat better than BMI. Visceral fat is the marker of ectopic fat accumulation. In this review, I will introduce my researches mainly involved in uncovering the clues to the link between metabolic health and cardiovascular disease.https://e-dmj.org/Synapse/Data/PDFData/2004DMJ/dmj-42-19.pdfCardiovascular diseasesMetabolic syndromeObesity |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eun-Jung Rhee |
spellingShingle |
Eun-Jung Rhee Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health Diabetes & Metabolism Journal Cardiovascular diseases Metabolic syndrome Obesity |
author_facet |
Eun-Jung Rhee |
author_sort |
Eun-Jung Rhee |
title |
Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health |
title_short |
Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health |
title_full |
Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health |
title_fullStr |
Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health |
title_full_unstemmed |
Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health |
title_sort |
being metabolically healthy, the most responsible factor for vascular health |
publisher |
Korean Diabetes Association |
series |
Diabetes & Metabolism Journal |
issn |
2233-6079 2233-6087 |
publishDate |
2018-01-01 |
description |
The prevalence of obesity is rapidly increasing worldwide. One-thirds of world population is suffering from the deleterious effects of excessive fat and adipose tissue in their body. At the same time, the average life expectancy is becoming higher and higher every decade. Therefore, living healthy and longer is the dream for everyone. Simply being obese is not the primary cause for the consequence of obesity; rather, the depot where the fat is accumulated, is the primary key for the deleterious effects of obesity. Results from historical research suggest that visceral fat increases the risk for cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, such as diabetes, myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke, not subcutaneous fat. Therefore, body mass index (BMI), which reflects body weight relative to height might not reflect the appropriate size of metabolic burden of fat in our body. In contrast, waist circumference, which reflects abdominal obesity, would mirror the metabolic burden of fat better than BMI. Visceral fat is the marker of ectopic fat accumulation. In this review, I will introduce my researches mainly involved in uncovering the clues to the link between metabolic health and cardiovascular disease. |
topic |
Cardiovascular diseases Metabolic syndrome Obesity |
url |
https://e-dmj.org/Synapse/Data/PDFData/2004DMJ/dmj-42-19.pdf |
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