Obesity and Heart
It is suspected that extra fat tissue, particularly surrounding the waist, can directly affect your heart structure and function even without any other risks of heart disease. In order to support this theory, researchers made an assessment on older individuals of different weights in search for signs of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. This condition is distinguished by changes to the structure of the heart’s main pumping chamber (left ventricle), which prevent it from filling sufficiently between beats. Left ventricle diastolic dysfunction displays no symptoms, but it can signify a heart failure in the future. Heart failure happens when the heart muscle becomes so weak or stiff that it cannot supply a sufficient amount of blood and oxygen that the body requires any more.
Congestive Heart Failure
Left ventricular hypertrophy usually occurs among obese people, and can comparatively be linked to systemic hypertension. Nevertheless, in some cases, there still, without hypertension, arouse abnormalities in left ventricular mass and function which can have a connection with the severity of obesity. Obese people are at about three times higher risk of hypertension than normal-weight people. This can be explained by the cause-and-effect relationship in that the lower weight, the lower blood pressure, and the higher weight, the higher blood pressure.
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