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Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: News Articles => Topic started by: okarol on June 25, 2008, 11:05:23 AM
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Weight Gain Within The Normal Range Increases Risk Of Chronic Kidney Disease
ScienceDaily (June 24, 2008) — Healthy individuals who gain weight, even to a weight still considered normal, are at risk for developing chronic kidney disease (CKD), according to a study appearing in the Journal of the American Society Nephrology (JASN). The study suggests that CKD should be added to the list of conditions that are associated with weight gain, including diabetes and hypertension.
Research has shown that obesity is linked to an increased risk of CKD, but no studies have looked at the effects of weight gain within the "normal" range of an individual's body mass index. To investigate, Drs. Seungho Ryu and Yoosoo Chang of the Kangbuk Samsung Hospital in Seoul, Korea, and their colleagues conducted a prospective study of individuals who were of a healthy weight and had no known risk factors for chronic kidney disease.
In Korea, all workers participate in either annual or biennial health exams, as required by Korea's Industrial Safety and Health Law. As a result, the investigators had access to clinical data from thousands of individuals. For this study, they included 8,792 healthy men who participated in the health exams in 2002.
The researchers discovered a U-shaped association between weight change and development of CKD. Men who lost or gained a lot of weight (more than 0.75 kg per year) had the highest risk of developing CKD. Those whose weight changed minimally (within a range of -0.25 to <0.25 kg per year) had the lowest risk, even when factors such as body mass index, age, exercise, lipids, and blood glucose levels were taken into account.
The authors note that their finding of an increased risk associated with weight loss should be interpreted with caution. A number of factors may have complicated the results. For example, men with the most weight loss may have been less healthy at the start of the study.
According to Dr. Ryu, because the recommended weight for a person of a given height spans a wide range, individuals are not likely to be observant of weight fluctuations as long as they remain within the healthy range.
But this study shows that weight gain even within the normal range is significantly associated with an increased risk of developing CKD. "Our findings show that weight gain within 'the normal' weight range is clearly one of the risk factors in developing CKD, and initial low body mass index does not counteract the deleterious effect of weight gain. Therefore, avoidance of weight gain, even among lean individuals, is important to reduce the risk for this disease," the authors said.
Journal reference:
1. Ryu et al. Changes in Body Weight Predict CKD in Healthy Men. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2008 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2007121286
Adapted from materials provided by American Society of Nephrology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080619163115.htm
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Reading studies like this tempts me to say that all epidemiological inferences are nonsense, but I realize that in all honesty probably no more than 90% of them are.
One thing I find often in epidemiological studies is that if they do not reinforce the dominant assumptions, the results are simply explained away, such as in the comment here that the correlation between weight loss and renal failure must be due to confounding variables. The essence of good science involves concentrating on the ANOMALIES and the UNEXPECTED RESULTS, because these are the source of progress. The fact that physics focuses on such incongruities while medicine tries to sweep them under the carpet is part of the reason we can send spacecraft to Mars but we can't cure the common cold.