
Why would a cardiologist be so concerned with your waistline? The reason has less to do with how you look on the outside than it does with how you look on the inside. I'm worried about what prediabetes and diabetes are doing to your arteries. Both conditions can injure the lining of your vessels and accelerate the production of plaque, greatly increasing your risk of having a heart attack or stroke.
After a meal, it is the job of insulin to help transport fats as well as sugar from the blood into the tissues. As you develop insulin resistance, fats accumulate in your bloodstream and hang around much longer than usual. During this time, changes in your blood fats occur — your LDL particles and your HDL particles become smaller and your total HDL is reduced. These changes favor the movement of cholesterol from your bloodstream into your artery walls. The smaller and denser the LDLs are, the more likely they are to move into your vessel walls. And the smaller and denser the HDLs are, the less efficient they are at removing the cholesterol from those vessel walls. These changes are also associated with high blood fat levels measured in the form of triglycerides. The fact that these fats are in your bloodstream longer also favors their accumulation in the vessel walls.
So, if you have gained predominantly belly fat as an adult and there is diabetes in your family (even if it occurred in a parent or grandparent late in life), you probably are insulin resistant and have prediabetes. The diagnosis of prediabetes is made if you meet three of the five following criteria:
- Central obesity: A waist circumference of greater than 40 inches for men and 35 inches for women
- Elevated triglycerides: Greater than or equal to 150 mg/dL
- Low total HDL: Less than or equal to 40 mg/dL for men and less than or equal to 50 mg/dL for women
- Elevated blood pressure: Systolic blood pressure of greater than or equal to 130 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure of greater than or equal to 85 mm Hg
- Elevated fasting glucose: Greater than or equal to 100 mg/dL
http://www.everydayhealth.com/heart-health/waistline-and-heart-health.aspx?xid=nl_TheSouthBeachDietTMNewsletter_20110507




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