A new study by US researchers has found that overweight, apple-shaped women are more at risk of developing osteoporosis than those who are pear-shaped.
A new study by US researchers has found that overweight, apple-shaped women are more at risk of developing osteoporosis than those who are pear-shaped. The common perception has been that having a higher percentage of body fat protects against the bone-wasting disease.
But the new study found that overweight women with lots of fat around their abdomens, as opposed to pear-shaped women with more fat on their hips and legs, were at greater risk of osteoporosis.
In their study 50 overweight, pre-menopausal women with an average body mass index (BMI) of 30 were scanned for their distribution of fat and their bone mineral density.
Those with more visceral fat - which is located deep under the muscle tissue in the abdominal cavity - had lower bone mineral density, one of the tell-tale indications of osteoporosis.
There was no strong link between either total fat or subcutaneous fat - which tends to be stored on the hips and thighs - and bone mineral density.
"We know that obesity is a major public health problem. Now we know that abdominal obesity needs to be included as a risk factor for osteoporosis and bone loss," the Telegraph quoted Dr Miriam Bredella, a radiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and assistant professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School, as saying.
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"It is important for the public to be aware that excess belly fat is a risk factor for bone loss, as well as heart disease and diabetes," she added.
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Source-ANI