Height and Health: The Connection Between Height and Disease Risk

by time news

2023-08-09 22:52:54
NEWS ARTICLE – Are tall people healthier than shorter people?

08.08.2023

Researchers have discovered that tall people have a lower risk of heart attack, but that tall people are more likely to develop cancer. Who is most at risk of diseases such as diabetes and others?

It is true that the extent of a person’s health awareness in his daily life strongly affects his health, but the length of a person’s body can also affect his risk of disease.

For diabetes, tall people have a better advantage, compared to shorter people. Because the percentage of fat in the liver of tall people is lower and their insulin response is greater than that of shorter people, according to Norbert Stefan, a professor of clinical experimental diabetes at Tubingen University Hospital.

On the other hand, people who are shorter in height suffer from a poor utilization of glucose, which means that they are more likely to develop diabetes on average, according to what the “Journalism Editorial Network in Germany” (RND) wrote.

An evaluation conducted at the University Hospital in Dusseldorf in May 2023 also reached this same conclusion: the taller women and men were in different age groups, the less likely they were to develop type 2 diabetes. However, there are risk factors for developing diabetes in the case of severe obesity and lack of physical activity, for example.

Carl Kostev, in charge of epidemiological research at the IQVIA Research Institute, analyzed data on 780,000 adult patients in collaboration with a team of internists at the University Hospital Düsseldorf. The conclusion was as follows: For every ten centimeters shorter in height, the risk of developing type 2 diabetes increases by 15 percent in women and by 10 percent in men. On the other hand, there is no association between height or shortness of height and type 1 diabetes, which often begins in childhood or adolescence due to an absolute lack of the hormone insulin.

The website “Journalism Editorial Network in Germany” confirms that height is also associated with the risk of cardiovascular disease. For this purpose, the data of nearly 660,000 patients at the University Hospital Dusseldorf was analyzed – and the result was: Women and men of shorter stature were more likely to develop high blood pressure or to have strokes in which brain tissue dies.

According to Dr. Stefan, Professor of Experimental Diabetes, tall people have many advantages, he lists among them: “Less fatty acids, less LDL-cholesterol, less glucose, and more favorable liver proteins (hepatokins).” This means that tall people have a lower risk of heart attacks.

In the dataset from Dusseldorf, shorter men and women were more likely to have coronary heart disease, in which blood vessels narrow, which also increases the risk of heart attack.

According to the study, for every ten centimeter increase in height, the risk of this decreases by 9% in women and 13% in men. By contrast, taller women and men are more likely to develop atrial fibrillation.

Obviously, tall people do not have the same advantages in this regard. Dr. Stefan explains: “The longer the limbs, the more blood is pumped to the heart. According to Dr. Stefan, up to 90 percent of blood clots originate in the deep veins of the legs, and can lead to pulmonary embolism.”

His colleague Kostev and the team of internists in Dusseldorf also came to the conclusion that the risk of developing the disease increases by 23 percent for every ten centimeters of height.

A look at a Swedish analysis from 2017 shows that tall people have a higher risk of stroke.

US researchers also came to the conclusion that tall people have a higher risk of developing atrial fibrillation and varicose veins, which can promote thrombosis.

In the case of cancer, too, there is a relationship between height and the incidence of cancer. A comparison of data conducted by the University Hospital Dusseldorf showed that taller patients are more likely to develop cancer. The risk increases by 11 percent in women and by 6 percent in men for every ten centimeters of increase in height.

The German Journalism Editorial Network (RND) reports that researchers have also found an association between human height and certain types of cancer. Stefan mentions the three most common types of tall people: melanoma, colon cancer, and breast cancer.

Overall, while tall people have a lower risk of heart attack, they are more likely to develop cancer. The relationship between height and diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease is also evident. However, it is essential to note that other factors such as obesity and lifestyle choices also play a significant role in disease risk.

Prepared by: [Author Name]]
#susceptible #disease #Tall #tall

You may also like

Leave a Comment