Zamboni M, Mazzali G, Zoico E, Harris T B, Meigs J B, Di Francesco V, Fantin F, Bissoli L, Bosello O
Division of Geriatric Medicine, University of Verona, Verona, Italy.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2005 Sep;29(9):1011-29. doi: 10.1038/sj.ijo.0803005.
Obesity prevalence is growing progressively even among older age groups. Controversy exists about the potential harms of obesity in the elderly. Debate persists about the relation between obesity in old age and total or disease-specific mortality, the definition of obesity in the elderly, its clinical relevance, and about the need for its treatment. Knowledge of age-related body composition and fat distribution changes will help us to better understand the relationships between obesity, morbidity and mortality in the elderly. Review of the literature supports that central fat and relative loss of fat-free mass may become relatively more important than BMI in determining the health risk associated with obesity in older ages. Weight gain or fat redistribution in older age may still confer adverse health risks (for earlier mortality, comorbidities conferring independent adverse health risks, or for functional decline). Evaluation of comorbidity and weight history should be performed in the elderly in order to generate a comprehensive assessment of the potential adverse health effects of overweight or obesity. The risks of obesity in the elderly have been underestimated by a number of confounders such as survival effect, competing mortalities, relatively shortened life expectancy in older persons, smoking, weight change and unintentional weight loss. Identification of elderly subjects with sarcopenic obesity is probably clinically relevant, but the definition of sarcopenic obesity, the benefits of its clinical identification, as well as its relation to clinical consequences require further study. Studies on the effect of voluntary weight loss in the elderly are scarce, but they suggest that even small amounts of weight loss (between 5-10% of initial body weight) may be beneficial. In older as well as in younger adults, voluntary weight loss may help to prevent the adverse health consequences of obesity.
即使在老年人群体中,肥胖患病率也在逐渐上升。关于肥胖对老年人的潜在危害存在争议。关于老年肥胖与全因死亡率或特定疾病死亡率之间的关系、老年人肥胖的定义、其临床相关性以及治疗必要性的争论仍在持续。了解与年龄相关的身体成分和脂肪分布变化将有助于我们更好地理解老年人肥胖、发病率和死亡率之间的关系。文献综述支持,在确定与老年肥胖相关的健康风险时,中心性脂肪和无脂肪体重的相对减少可能比体重指数更为重要。老年时体重增加或脂肪重新分布仍可能带来不良健康风险(导致更早死亡、伴有独立不良健康风险的合并症或功能衰退)。为了全面评估超重或肥胖对老年人潜在的不良健康影响,应对老年人的合并症和体重史进行评估。肥胖对老年人的风险被一些混杂因素低估了,如生存效应、竞争性死亡率、老年人相对缩短的预期寿命、吸烟、体重变化和非故意体重减轻。识别患有肌肉减少性肥胖的老年受试者可能具有临床意义,但肌肉减少性肥胖的定义、临床识别的益处以及它与临床后果的关系仍需进一步研究。关于老年人自愿减肥效果的研究很少,但这些研究表明,即使少量体重减轻(初始体重的5%-10%)也可能有益。无论在老年人还是年轻人中,自愿减肥都可能有助于预防肥胖带来的不良健康后果。