• New York blog by New York

    A discussion of all things New York science. A group effort by Sabbi Lall, Caryn Shechtman, Neda Afsarmanesh and Barry Hudson.

    • A Protective Effect of Obesity

      Thursday, 25 Jun 2009 - 01:13 UTC

      It isn’t too often that you hear about the beneficial aspects of obesity. So when I saw a NY Times article with the title Obesity May Have Offered Edge Over TB I was intrigued. The article discusses a commentary published this week in JAMA by Jesse Roth, MD of Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. Roth suggests that the proinflammatory responses triggered by obesity may have been protective against tuberculosis. In particular, Roth makes the case that increased levels of the cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a proinflammatory marker that increases with obesity, is a potent anti-tuberculosis factor. To support his claim, Roth points out that therapeutic treatments that decrease TNF activity are associated with increased risk of tuberculosis reactivation.

      Roth then goes on to discuss that the obese subgroup likely had a selective advantage over the general population, and that may be the reason why so many people are prone to metabolic diseases today. In essence, this adds a new element to the thrifty gene hypothesis, suggesting that obesity was not only protective in times of famine but it was also protective against infectious diseases such as tuberculosis.

      But we must not confuse association with causation. While Roth makes some interesting speculations about the effects of obesity on tuberculosis and how selective pressure has favored this group, the evidence provided is not causal. Roth reinforces this in his concluding remarks where he writes, “it is important to recognize that theoretical constructs, no matter how logical, may yield conclusions that are not correct.” In my opinion, it is more likely that sedentary lifestyle and calorie-dense diets are the major contributors to the array of metabolic diseases we know today. Nonetheless, it is difficult to tease out the genetic versus environmental components of metabolic diseases and it is likely that both play their part in contributing to metabolic syndromes.

      Last updated: Thursday, 25 Jun 2009 - 01:13 UTC

      • Comments

        • Date:
          Friday, 26 Jun 2009 - 19:44 UTC
          Elizabeth Moritz said:

          Interesting post Caryn. This is the first I’ve seen of a positive aspect for obesity. Are there others that you know of? Thanks for bringing it to our attention!

        • Date:
          Friday, 26 Jun 2009 - 21:16 UTC
          Henry Gee said:

          Writing as one who is built for comfort rather than speed, it makes some kind of sense for obesity to be good for something. Until relatively recently, even in Europe, plumpness was seen as a sign of good health, prosperity, fecundity and so on. Poor people were thin – and sometimes had TB, too.

          I guess that obesity also has a protective effect in resisting minor collisions and physical shocks, a thought that brings to mind the following cautionary tale:

          A lady who weighed many an oz.
          Use language I dare not pronoz.
          When a fellow, unkind
          Pulled her chair out behind
          Just to see (so he said) if she’d boz.

        • Date:
          Saturday, 27 Jun 2009 - 18:20 UTC
          Caryn Shechtman said:

          Elizabeth and Henry – I think I have found another positive side of being obese, which involves resisting shocks…

          In the movie Kung Foo Panda the villain, Tai Lung, has a special nerve attack which completely paralyzes the victim. However, the panda is too fat for the strikes to reach the correct points and is resistant to the technique!

          That is the best I can do. The movie is great though.

        • Date:
          Saturday, 27 Jun 2009 - 19:55 UTC
          Henry Gee said:

          I think Tai Lung’s nerve attack just makes the panda giggle. It’s a great film, though – a kids film that’s much funnier if you’re an adult .

        • Date:
          Sunday, 28 Jun 2009 - 19:33 UTC
          Caryn Shechtman said:

          I agree Henry. There are so many good kid films for adults these days. Next om my list is Up.


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