Obesity in Older Adults and Associations with Cardiovascular Structure and Function

Introduction: Body mass index (BMI), despite being widely used as a marker of obesity, fails to fully capture cardiovascular risks as it is an insufficient biomarker of abdominal adiposity, unlike waist circumference (WC). We aim to characterize associations between BMI and WC with cardiovascular structure and function in older adults. Methods: Among an observational cohort study of community older adults, transthoracic echocardiography determined cardiovascular structure and function, while aerobic capacity was determined by peak oxygen uptake (VO2) metrics. The cut-offs for obesity were 27.5kg/m2 for BMI, and>90cm for males and>80cm for females for WC. Results: 970 older adults without cardiovascular disease [mean age 73 ±4 years, 432 (44%) males], 124 (12.8%) were obese by BMI definition while 347 (35.7%) were obese by WC definition. Inter-definitional agreement was fair (Cohen’s κ=0.345). Unlike BMI definition, participants defined as obese by WC were more likely to be women (65% vs 50%, p
Source: Obesity Facts - Category: Eating Disorders & Weight Management Source Type: research