Department of Cardiovascular Diseases, John Ochsner Heart and Vascular Institute, Ochsner Clinical School-the University of Queensland School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, United States of America.
Department of Cardiovascular Diseases, John Ochsner Heart and Vascular Institute, Ochsner Clinical School-the University of Queensland School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, United States of America.
Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 2018 Jul-Aug;61(2):142-150. doi: 10.1016/j.pcad.2018.07.003. Epub 2018 Jul 5.
Obesity increases a number of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, but patients with many types of CVD may have a better prognosis if classified as overweight or obese, a phenomenon known as the "obesity paradox". This paradoxical benefit of a medically unfavorable phenotype is particularly strong in the overweight and class I obesity, and less pronounced in the more severe or morbidly obese populations (class II-III and greater). Rather than an obesity paradox, it is possible that this phenomenon may represent a "lean paradox", in which individuals classified as normal weight or underweight may have a poorer prognosis with respect to CVD, as a result of a progressive catabolic state and lean mass loss. Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a fundamental part of this discussion. A greater CRF is associated with lower CVD risk, regardless of body mass index (BMI). Also, the assessment of body composition compartments (i.e., fat mass, fat-free mass, lean mass) and the presence of metabolic derangements may be better indicators of CVD risk than BMI alone. The focus of this review is to summarize the current evidence of the obesity paradox. Moreover, we discuss the utility and limitations of BMI for cardiometabolic risk stratification, in addition to concepts such as "metabolically healthy obesity" (MHO) and the "fat but fit" phenomenon, which describe patients who are diagnosed with obesity using BMI, but without major metabolic derangements and with greater CRF, respectively. Finally, we propose that obese patients presenting with an excess body fat, yet without metabolic abnormalities, should still be viewed as an "at risk" population, and as such should receive advice to change their lifestyle to improve their CRF and to prevent the development of impaired fasting glucose, diabetes mellitus and other CVD risk factors as a form of primary prevention.
肥胖会增加许多心血管疾病 (CVD) 的风险因素,但如果将患有多种 CVD 的患者归类为超重或肥胖,他们的预后可能会更好,这种现象被称为“肥胖悖论”。这种对医学上不利表型的反常益处在超重和 I 级肥胖中尤为明显,而在更严重或病态肥胖人群(II-III 级及以上)中则不那么明显。这可能不是肥胖悖论,而是“瘦型悖论”,即根据 CVD,将个体归类为正常体重或体重不足可能预示着预后较差,这是由于进行性分解代谢状态和瘦体重丢失所致。心肺适能 (CRF) 是讨论的基本部分。无论体重指数 (BMI) 如何,更高的 CRF 与更低的 CVD 风险相关。此外,评估身体成分区室(即脂肪量、去脂体重、瘦体重)和代谢紊乱的存在可能比 BMI 本身更好地预测 CVD 风险。本综述的重点是总结肥胖悖论的当前证据。此外,我们还讨论了 BMI 在心代谢风险分层中的实用性和局限性,以及“代谢健康肥胖” (MHO) 和“胖但健康”现象等概念,这些概念描述了使用 BMI 诊断为肥胖的患者,但没有主要代谢紊乱和更高的 CRF。最后,我们提出,尽管肥胖患者体脂过多,但没有代谢异常,仍应被视为“高危”人群,因此应建议他们改变生活方式,以提高 CRF,并预防空腹血糖受损、糖尿病和其他 CVD 风险因素的发展,作为一级预防。