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The obesity paradox in elderly patients with heart failure Analysis of nutritional status, heart failure

The obesity paradox in elderly patients with heart failure: Analysis of nutritional status


Natural Remedies for Heart Disease Treatment - http://www.naturalremediescenter.com/treat/heart-disease/

A Casas-Vara, F Santolaria... - Nutrition, 2012 - Elsevier Objective The obesity paradox refers to the improved survival of obese compared with non-obese elderly or diseased patients for reasons that are not clear. To assess the relative roles of fat and other factors in this improved survival, we analyzed the prognostic value of ...

The obesity paradox refers to the improved survival of obese compared with non-obese elderly or diseased patients for reasons that are not clear. To assess the relative roles of fat and other factors in this improved survival, we analyzed the prognostic value of overweight and obesity elderly patients with heart failure (HF), controlling for other nutritional data such as midarm anthropometrics, serum proteins, and muscle strength.

Fourteen patients (5.7%) died during hospitalization. The median survival was 984 d. Patients with better nutritional status as assessed by the body mass index (BMI), subjective score, midarm muscle area, triceps skinfold thickness, handgrip, lymphocyte count, and serum albumin, prealbumin, and cholesterol levels showed better short- and long-term prognoses. Obese patients with a BMI above 30 kg/m2 showed a better long-term prognosis than those with a BMI from 25 to 30 kg/m2, those with a BMI from 20 to 25 kg/m2, and those with a BMI lower than 20 kg/m2. However, survival was not significantly related to a triceps skinfold thickness above the 95th percentile. Obese and overweight patients were younger and had better a nutritional status than those with a normal or decreased BMI as shown by the anthropometrics, subjective score, handgrip, lymphocyte count, hemoglobin, and serum albumin, prealbumin, and cholesterol levels. All the nutritional data correlated closely with each other. New York Heart Association class also correlated with nutrition-derived data: as the HF class increased, the nutritional status deteriorated. On multivariate analysis, to predict long-term survival, neither BMI nor triceps skinfold thickness showed an independent predictive value, whereas a larger midarm muscle area did.

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The obesity paradox in elderly patients with heart failure: Analysis of nutritional status
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Coronary artery disease
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