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Commentary—fat but fit…and cold? Potential evolutionary and environmental drivers of metabolically healthy obesity

Cara Ocobock, Alexandra Niclou

2022Evolution Medicine and Public Health14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As global obesity rates continue to rise, it is important to understand the origin, role and range of human variation of body mass index (BMI) in assessing health and healthcare. A growing body of evidence suggests that BMI is a poor indicator of health across populations, and that there may be a metabolically healthy obese phenotype. Here, we review the reasons why BMI is an inadequate tool for assessing cardiometabolic health. We then suggest that cold climate adaptations may also render BMI an uninformative metric. Underlying evolutionary and environmental drivers may allow for heat conserving larger body sizes without necessarily increasing metabolic health risks. However, there may also be a potential mismatch between modern obesogenic environments and adaptations to cold climates, highlighting the need to further investigate the potential for metabolically healthy obese phenotypes among circumpolar and other populations as well as the broader meaning for metabolic health.

Topics & Concepts

ObesityBody mass indexCircumpolar starHuman healthBiologyEnvironmental healthMedicineEndocrinologyAstronomyPhysicsAdipose Tissue and MetabolismDiet and metabolism studiesThermoregulation and physiological responses
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