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Causes of Obesity
The reasons for obesity are multiple and complex. Despite conventional
wisdom, it is not simply a result of overeating. Research has shown that
in many cases a significant, underlying cause of morbid obesity is
genetic. Studies have demonstrated that once the problem is established,
efforts such as dieting and exercise programs have a limited ability to
provide effective long-term relief.
Science continues to search for answers. But until the disease is better
understood, the control of excess weight is something patients must work
at for their entire lives.
That is why it is very important to understand that all current medical
interventions, including weight loss surgery, should not be considered
medical cures. Rather they are attempts to reduce the effects of
excessive weight and alleviate the serious physical, emotional and
social consequences
of the disease.
Contributing Factors
Genetic Factors
The Pima Paradox
Environmental Factors
Metabolism
Contributing Factors
The underlying causes of severe obesity are not known. There are many
factors that contribute to the development of obesity including genetic,
environmental, metabolic and eating disorders. There are also certain
medical conditions that may result in obesity, such as intake of
steroids and hypothyroidism. What's more, our society has become
increasingly inactive while our healthy food consumption decreases.
High-calorie food and lack of exercise all contribute to the American
population's becoming more and more overweight.
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Genetic Factors
Numerous scientific studies have established that your genes play an
important role in your tendency to gain excess weight.
The body weight of adopted children shows no correlation with the body
weight of their adoptive parents, who feed them and teach them how to
eat. Their weight does have an 80 percent correlation with their genetic
parents, whom they have never met.
Identical twins, with the same genes, show a much higher similarity of
body weights than do fraternal twins, who have different genes.
Certain groups of people, such as the Pima Indian tribe in Arizona, have
a very high incidence of severe obesity. They also have significantly
higher rates of diabetes and heart disease than other ethnic groups.
We probably have a number of genes directly related to weight. Just as
some genes determine eye color or height, others affect our appetite,
our ability to feel full or satisfied, our metabolism, our fat-storing
ability, and even our natural activity levels.
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The Pima Paradox
The Pima Indians are known in scientific circles as one of the heaviest
groups of people in the world. In fact, National Institutes of Health
researchers have been studying them for more than 35 years. Some adults
weigh more than 500 pounds, and many obese teenagers are suffering from
diabetes, the disease most frequently associated with obesity.
But, interestingly, a group of Pima Indians living in Sierra Madre,
Mexico, does not have a problem with obesity and its related diseases.
Why not?
The leading theory states that after many generations of living in the
desert, often confronting famine, the most successful Pima were those
with genes that helped them store as much fat as possible during times
when food was available. Now those fat-storing genes work against them.
Though both populations consume a similar number of calories each day,
the Mexican Pima still live much like their ancestors did. They put in
23 hours of physical labor each week and eat a traditional diet very low
in fat. The Arizona Pima live like most other modern Americans, eating a
diet consisting of around 40 percent fat and engaging in physical
activity for only two hours a week.
The Pima apparently have a genetic predisposition to gain weight. And
the environment in which they livethe environment in which most of us
livemakes it nearly impossible for the Arizona Pima to maintain a
normal, healthy body weight.
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Environmental
Factors
Environmental and genetic factors are obviously closely intertwined. If
you have a genetic predisposition toward obesity, then the modern
American lifestyle and environment may make controlling weight more
difficult.
Fast food, long days sitting at a desk, and suburban neighborhoods that
require cars all magnify hereditary factors such as metabolism and
efficient fat storage.
For those suffering from morbid obesity, anything less than a total
change in environment usually results in failure to reach and maintain a
healthy body weight.
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Metabolism
We used to think of weight gain or loss as only a function of calories
ingested and then burned. Take in more calories than you burn, gain
weight; burn more calories than you ingest, lose weight. But now we know
the equation isn't that simple.
Obesity researchers now talk about a theory called the "set point," a
sort of thermostat in the brain that makes people resistant to weight
loss. If you try to override the set point by drastically cutting your
calorie intake, your brain responds by lowering metabolism and slowing
activity. You then gain back any weight you lost.
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