AI Article Synopsis

  • The obesity paradox indicates that, despite the known health risks of obesity, some studies show obese surgical patients may have better outcomes than expected, particularly when compared to underweight and morbidly obese individuals.
  • Research underlines that both underweight and morbidly obese patients experience higher rates of morbidity and mortality following surgery, challenging the traditional views on BMI.
  • Potential explanations for the obesity paradox include factors like increased lean body mass, protective fat distribution, reduced inflammation, genetic influences, and improved cardiovascular health, but many aspects remain unclear and warrant further investigation.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite the medical hazards of obesity, recent reports examining body mass index (BMI) show an inverse relationship with morbidity and mortality in the surgical patient. This phenomenon is known as the 'obesity paradox'. The aim of this review is to summarize both the literature concerned with the obesity paradox in the surgical setting, as well as the theories explaining its causation.

Methods: PubMed was searched to identify available literature. Search criteria included obesity paradox and BMI paradox, and studies in which BMI was used as a measure of body fat were potentially eligible for inclusion in this review.

Results: The obesity paradox has been demonstrated in cardiac and in non-cardiac surgery patients. Underweight and morbidly obese patients displayed the worse outcomes, both postoperatively as well as at long-term follow-up. Hypotheses to explain the obesity paradox include increased lean body mass, (protective) peripheral body fat, reduced inflammatory response, genetics and a decline in cardiovascular disease risk factors, but probably unknown factors contribute too.

Conclusions: Patients at the extremes of BMI, both the underweight and the morbid obese, seem to have the highest postoperative morbidity and mortality hazard, which even persists at long-term. The cause of the obesity paradox is probably multi-factorial. This offers potential for future research in order to improve outcomes for persons on both sides of the 'optimum BMI'.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.surge.2013.02.003DOI Listing

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