Fat on the Body = Less Healthy Brains

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Drs. Oz and Roizen By Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D.

Obesity and your brain are not a happy couple

Feb 5, 2019

In Japan, most Sumo wrestlers weigh 300-400 pounds. While they’re professionally active, they follow a diet and workout routine that helps keep them surprisingly healthy, considering their girth. But once they stop training, they’re prone to Type 2 diabetes, high LDL cholesterol and cardiovascular disease, and they have a life expectancy that’s 10 years shorter than the general population.


It shouldn’t take a genius to figure out that sooner or later, being chronically obese is going to exact consequences. Belly fat and brains … if you got one, you’re losing the other!


In a study published in Neurology, researchers found that people with the highest body mass index and the highest waist-to-hip ratios (fat around the middle), had the lowest volume of brain gray matter. This matter contains most of the brain’s nerve cells, memory transmission centers and synapses


People with a BMI of 30 or above and a waist-to-hip ratio above 0.90 for males and above 0.85 for females had an average gray matter brain volume of 786 cubic centimeters. Folks with healthy BMIs and waist-to-hip ratios had an average volume of gray matter of 798 cubic centimeters. 


Just being overweight, even without a huge belly, is associated with a smaller hippocampal memory-relay center.


Such gray-matter shrinkage puts you at risk for dementia! So, let this be the year that you’re summa (not Sumo) cum laude about your health! 

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