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Obesity in South Asia: Phenotype, Morbidities, and Mitigation.

Current obesity reports
March 1, 2019
Anoop Misra et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to review the characteristics of obesity, its relation to morbidities, and its management in South Asians, including the need for aggressive interventions like diet and exercise.

Results Summary

The study found that South Asians exhibit a unique obesity phenotype with higher body fat and lower muscle mass at similar BMIs, increasing risks for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. It highlighted challenges in obesity management, such as lack of awareness, cultural barriers, and insufficient healthcare resources, advocating for early and intensive interventions.

Population

South Asians

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
imbalanced diets
increase
obesity prevalence
South Asians
increasing trend
caused
#1
physical inactivity
increase
obesity prevalence
South Asians
increasing trend
caused
#2
-
increase
body fat
South Asians
-
have higher
#3
-
decrease
skeletal muscle mass
South Asians
-
have lower
#4
excess abdominal adiposity
increase
risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease
South Asians
-
associated with
#5
increased hepatic fat (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease)
increase
risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease
South Asians
-
associated with
#6
lack of awareness regarding correct diets
neutral
challenges in treatment
South Asians
-
include
#7
non-compliance to diet and exercise regimens
neutral
challenges in treatment
South Asians
-
include
#8
social and cultural issues
decrease
physical activity
South Asian women
-
limit
#9
lack of expert health professionals
neutral
increased cases of obesity
South Asians
-
to deal with
#10
more intensive and earlier diet and exercise interventions
neutral
aggressive management of obesity
South Asians
-
required
#11
prevention strategies focusing on obesity in childhood
decrease
obesity
South Asians
-
should be firmly applied
#12
creation of food and activity environments that encourage healthy lifestyles
decrease
obesity
South Asians
-
should be firmly applied
#13
Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Obesity has increased in South Asian countries that are still grappling with undernutrition. In this review, we highlight the characteristics of obesity, its relation to morbidities, and its management in South Asians. A literature search was conducted using relevant search engines and based on key words focusing on obesity in South Asians. RECENT FINDINGS: The increasing trend in obesity prevalence is caused by imbalanced diets and physical inactivity. South Asians, in general, have higher body fat and lower skeletal muscle mass at the same or lower BMIs compared to white people ("high body fat-normal BMI-low muscle mass" phenotype). In addition, excess abdominal adiposity, typically seen in South Asians, and increased hepatic fat (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease) are associated with an increased risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Challenges in treatment include lack of awareness regarding correct diets and non-compliance to diet and exercise regimens. Social and cultural issues limit physical activity in South Asian women. Finally, there is a lack of expert health professionals to deal with increased cases of obesity. Aggressive management of obesity is required in South Asians, with more intensive and earlier diet and exercise interventions (i.e., at lower BMI levels than internationally accepted). At a population level, there is no clear policy for tackling obesity in any South Asian country. Prevention strategies focusing on obesity in childhood and the creation of food and activity environments that encourage healthy lifestyles should be firmly applied. Obesity in South Asians should be evaluated with ethnic-specific guidelines and prevention and management strategies should be applied early and aggressively.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Asia, WesternDietExerciseFemaleHumansMaleObesityPhenotypePrevalenceSex Factors
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations67
Citations/Year11.2
Relative Citation Ratio3.78
NIH Percentile89.3%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.19
Normalized Score0.53
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