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Symptoms
of Depression associated with increase in
Abdominal Fat
Newswise — Older adults with symptoms of
depression appear more likely to gain
abdominal fat, but not overall fat, over a
five-year period, according to a report in
the December issue of Archives of General
Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
About 10 percent to 15 percent of older
adults have symptoms of depression,
according to background information in the
article.
“Depression
has been associated with the onset of
diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cardiac
mortality [death],” the authors write.
“To better prevent occurrence of these major
disabling and life-threatening diseases,
more insight into underlying mechanisms
relating depression to these disorders is
needed.”
Nicole Vogelzangs, M.Sc., of VU University
Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands,
and colleagues studied 2,088 adults age 70
to 79 years.
Participants were screened for depression at
the beginning of the study and their overall
and abdominal obesity was recorded then and
again after five years.
Measures of overall obesity included body
mass index and body fat percentage, while
abdominal obesity was assessed using waist
circumference, sagittal diameter (distance
between the back and the highest point of
the abdomen) and visceral fat (fat between
the internal organs) measured by computed
tomography.
At the beginning of the study, 4 percent of
participants had depression. After adjusting
for sociodemographic and other
characteristics associated with weight
changes, depression was associated with an
increase in sagittal diameter and visceral
fat over five years.
“Such an association was not found for an
increase in overall obesity and also
appeared to be independent of changes in
overall obesity, suggesting that depressive
symptoms are rather specifically associated
with fat gain in the visceral region,” the
authors write.
There are several mechanisms by which
depression might increase abdominal fat,
they note. Chronic stress and depression may
activate certain brain areas and lead to
increased levels of the hormone cortisol,
which promotes the accumulation of visceral
fat.
Individuals
with depression may have unhealthier
lifestyles, including a poor diet, that
could interact with other physiological
factors to produce an increase in abdominal
obesity.
“Our longitudinal results suggest that
clinically relevant depressive symptoms give
rise to an increase in abdominal obesity, in
particular visceral fat, which seems to be
stronger than and independent of overall
obesity,” the authors conclude.
“This could also help explain why depression
is often followed by diabetes or
cardiovascular disease.
Future research should further disentangle
these mechanisms because this will yield
important information for prevention or
treatment of depression-related health
consequences.”
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