New Delhi: While reducing abdominal fat may be key to cut down risks to heart health, anything in excess -- extreme diets and exercise may prove to be harmful, said health experts on Friday, on the occasion of World Heart Day.
World Heart Day is annually observed on September 29 to raise awareness of diseases related to the heart, and also to work on solutions to mitigate it. Obesity is one of the major risk factors for heart disease, that also include smoking, eating unhealthy foods, diabetes, blood pressure, and a lack of exercise.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), even a modest weight loss, such as 5 to 10 per cent of your total body weight, is likely to produce health benefits, such as improvements in blood pressure, blood cholesterol, and blood sugars.
“Typically, your health is at ‘increased’ risk if you’re a man with a waist over 94cm (37in), or a woman with a waist over 80cm (31½in),” as per the British Heart Foundation (BHF). “Abdominal fat, supposed to be the worst fat, is likely to raise the risk of heart failure, high blood pressure, coronary artery diseases, heart attacks,” G. R. Kane, Consultant Cardiologist, P. D. Hinduja Hospital & Medical Research Centre, Mahim, told IANS.
Kane explained that the abdominal fat is deep among the intestine, stomach, liver and spleen. “It is set to be metabolically active once it secretes proteins or hormones, which stimulates the blood pressure to go up which also causes retention of sodium so it makes the person more prone for heart disease, it also causes the arteries to constrict because it produces those types of proteins,” he said.
A recent study published in the Journal of American Heart Association showed that visceral adipose tissue (fat that wraps around your abdominal organs) is associated with heart failure.
“Visceral fat produces toxins that affect the way your body works. It makes it harder for your body to use a hormone called insulin, which controls your blood glucose (sugar) levels,” the BHF said.