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Wednesday June 20, 2001
6:03 PM ET |

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Obesity Linked to Asthma in Women But Not Men
By Pamela G. Harrison
TORONTO (Reuters Health) - Obese women have almost double the
risk of developing asthma compared with women who are not obese, Canadian
researchers reported here at the 2001 Congress of Epidemiology. However, the
link between obesity and asthma risk did not apply to men in the study.
Dr. Yue Chen, a professor of epidemiology at the University of
Ottawa, and colleagues tracked new cases of asthma among 4,266 men and 4,883
women over a 2-year period. During the study, 1.6% of the men and 2.9% of the
women developed asthma.
``Average changes in body weight and body mass index over the
2-year period of observation were relatively small and were not associated
with the incidence of asthma,'' the researchers observed.
Body mass index (BMI) is a measure of weight relative to
height that is used to determine whether a person is overweight or obese.
People with a BMI above 25 are considered overweight, while those with a BMI
above 30 are considered obese.
Chen told Reuters Health in an interview that independent of
age, women with a BMI of at least 30 were about twice as likely to develop
asthma as women with a normal BMI.
In contrast, obese men were not significantly more likely to
develop asthma than normal-weight men.
Chen said the data are ``consistent'' with previously reported
data in which obesity was associated with a higher risk of asthma in Canadian
women, though not in men.
``We still need more studies, but other studies have
consistently shown that BMI is related to the new incidence of asthma in
women, too,'' Chen said.
Whether there is an interaction between genetic predisposition
to asthma, which accounts for approximately 40% of asthma, and obesity, is
still unknown, he added.
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