BODY-WEIGHT AND MORTALITY

Authors
Citation
Rf. Kushner, BODY-WEIGHT AND MORTALITY, Nutrition reviews, 51(5), 1993, pp. 127-136
Citations number
63
Categorie Soggetti
Nutrition & Dietetics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00296643
Volume
51
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
127 - 136
Database
ISI
SICI code
0029-6643(1993)51:5<127:BAM>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Over the years ideal or desirable weights have been associated with th e lowest mortality and defined in a number of ways. The widely used he ight-weight tables of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, develop ed in the 1940s, have been supplanted in the last decade by new weight standards based on findings of several population-based studies that compared body weight to mortality. The Quetelet or body mass index (BM I), now used as the de facto criterion for defining a desirable weight index, indicates relative fatness and is only minimally correlated wi th height. However, the optimal BMI or weight for longevity remains to be defined for a number of methodological reasons. This article revie ws the strength of the evidence for increased mortality in adults who are overweight or underweight based on standard BMI ranges and in thos e who reported a change in body weight. Epidemiological studies show t hat excess body weight is associated with increased mortality, dependi ng on fat patterning, gender, and age. A similar increase is shown for subjects with body weight below the relative weight range, although h ere associated life-style factors are greater contributors. Preliminar y data suggest that change in body weight may also be associated with increased mortality. Overall, carefully measured weight and height rem ain the most easily performed and useful determinants of nutritional s tatus and predictors of mortality for the general population.