Abstract

Overweight and obesity are considered a major burden on public health in developed countries. Underlying etiologies are enigmatic and metabolic causes have been suggested to various extents before. We analyze links of major blood parameters to individual body mass in a young male cohort, controlling for socio-cultural factors, in order to explore an underlying metabolic cause of obesity. Anthropometric (height, weight) physiologic (blood pressure) and metabolic data (total cholesterol, alanine transaminase, creatinine, postprandial glucose, blood cell counts, haemoglobin) of Swiss conscripts (N = 46,684; 18 - 20 yrs old; 2005-2007 census) were examined in the context of their socio-cultural groupings (occupation, mother tongue, religion) by ANOVA and stepwise multiple regression analysis. Swiss Armed Forces recruiting is mandatory, thus each year’s group studied reflects more than 80% of a year’s male Swiss citizen birth cohort. Individual body mass index ranged from 19 kg/m2 (5th percentile) to 29 kg/m2 (95th percentile) with a median of 22 kg/m2. BMI increases significantly, even within its normal range (18.5 - 25 kg/m2) with increases in alanine transaminase (r2 = 0.10), total cholesterol (r2 = 0.08) and erythrocyte counts (r2 = 0.02). All other parameters, including socio-cultural categories, explain individually 1% or less of total BMI variation. Glucose values do not correlate with BMI significantly, thus suggesting a specific metabolic co-etiology of individual mass increases. There may occur a biochemical anomaly in liver metabolism that underlies development of the metabolic syndrome later in life. Were it so, pharmacological intervention rather than just diet and exercise regime could be more effective treatment of obesity.

Highlights

  • Obesity is considered a major problem for public health in the 21st century

  • Glucose values do not correlate with body mass index (BMI) significantly, suggesting a specific metabolic co-etiology of individual mass increases

  • In this paper we explore relationships among obesity as measured by body weight and the body mass index (BMI), socioeconomic variables and a number of blood parameters which may be indicative of metabolic processes (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is commonly considered to be a result of the lifestyle of overnutrition and underexercise. Based on this concept, measures aimed at limiting the increase in adiposity have failed to reverse the trend. The prevalence of individuals with metabolic problems may be increasing as the variation in human biological characteristics is increasing under conditions of relaxed selection. This process has been documented for anatomical variations and anomalies [2,3,4,5,6], while with respect to metabolic variation it remains hypothetical

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