Waist to hip ratio in middle-aged women. Associations with behavioral and psychosocial factors and with changes in cardiovascular risk factors.
- 1 September 1991
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Arteriosclerosis and Thrombosis: A Journal of Vascular Biology
- Vol. 11 (5), 1250-1257
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.atv.11.5.1250
Abstract
Waist to hip ratio (WHR) was measured in 487 middle-aged women participating in the Healthy Women Study. Upper body fat distribution was found to be associated with numerous behaviors that affect cardiovascular risk, including smoking, low exercise levels, weight gain during adulthood, and higher caloric intake. Moreover, WHR was also associated with higher levels of anger, anxiety, and depression and lower levels of perceived social support. Women with upper body fat obesity had higher systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, and apolipoprotein B and lower levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) and the HDL subfractions 2 and 3. These associations remained significant after adjusting for body mass index. Among 108 women who had repeat measurements of WHR, changes in WHR over a 3-year period were significantly correlated with changes in activity and with decreases in HDL2. Thus, WHR appears to be an integral component of the cardiovascular risk profile. WHR is related to those behaviors and psychosocial attributes that influence cardiovascular risk.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Ratio of Waist-to-Hip Circumference, Plasma Insulin Level, and Glucose Intolerance as Independent Predictors of the HDL2Cholesterol Level in Older AdultsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Menopause and Risk Factors for Coronary Heart DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Coronary heart disease and Type A behaviors: Update on and alternative to the Booth-Kewley and Friedman (1987) quantitative review.Psychological Bulletin, 1988
- Association of body fat distribution with plasma lipids, lipoproteins, apolipoproteins AI and B in postmenopausal womenJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1988
- CENTRAL OBESITY AND CORONARY HEART DISEASE IN MENThe Lancet, 1987
- Psychosocial influences on female ‘protection’ among cynomolgus macaquesAtherosclerosis, 1984
- Distribution of adipose tissue and risk of cardiovascular disease and death: a 12 year follow up of participants in the population study of women in Gothenburg, Sweden.BMJ, 1984
- Abdominal adipose tissue distribution, obesity, and risk of cardiovascular disease and death: 13 year follow up of participants in the study of men born in 1913.BMJ, 1984
- Relationship of body fat topography to insulin sensitivity and metabolic profiles in premenopausal womenMetabolism, 1984
- ZERO-MUDDLER FOR UNPREJUDICED SPHYGMOMANOMETRYThe Lancet, 1963