Obesity Linked To Infertility In Women
Even With Regular Ovulation, Obesity Makes Getting Pregnant More Difficult
-
(CBS)
-
Interactive Diet And Nutrition Are you eating right? See the government's guidelines, calculate your body mass index and quiz yourself on healthy food choices.
-
Interactive HealthWatch Explore health issues including AIDS, cancer and antibiotics.
Women in the study who were severely obese were 43 percent less likely to achieve pregnancy than normal-weight women or women who were considered overweight but not obese during the yearlong study.
The study is among the first to examine the relationship between body weight and infertility in women who ovulate, says researcher Jan Willem van der Steeg, M.D., of Amsterdam's Academic Medical Center.
"We found that obesity is an additional risk factor for infertility in women who have regular [menstrual] cycles," he tells WebMD. "This is important given the increase in obesity worldwide."
Obesity and Infertility
Van der Steeg and colleagues followed 3,029 couples who were having trouble conceiving on their own.
All the couples had spent a year or more trying to conceive, and none had obvious reasons for fertility problems - the women were ovulating and had at least one functioning fallopian tube, and the men had normal semen analyses.
The couples were followed until pregnancy was achieved or until they started fertility treatments. In addition to a fertility history, the women's weight, height, and smoking status were measured at study entry.
The women were classified as underweight, normal weight, overweight, or obese based on their body mass index (BMI).
As measured by the BMI, a 5-foot 6-inch woman who weighs 115 to 154 pounds is considered normal weight (BMI of 18.5 to 24.9). If she weighs between 155 to 185 pounds she is considered overweight (BMI of 25 to 29.9), and she would be considered obese at a weight of 186 or more (BMI of 30+).
The vast majority of the study participants (86 percent) were either normal weight or overweight.
An additional 10 percent were obese, with BMIs of 30 or more. These women had the most trouble conceiving during the yearlong observation.
For example, a woman with a BMI of 35 was found to be 26 percent less likely to achieve a spontaneous pregnancy than women who were normal weight or overweight but not obese.
The issue of obesity and reproduction is complex, and we are only beginning to understand it.
The study appears in the December issue of the journal Human Reproduction.
Role of Obesity Is Complex
It is not clear how obesity affects fertility in women who ovulate normally. Van der Steeg suggests that disruptions in the hormone leptin, which regulates appetite and energy expenditure, may prevent successful fertilization.
Reproductive endocrinologist William Dodson, M.D., tells WebMD that it is increasingly clear that the role of obesity in reproduction is more complex than was once thought.
"What we once held as dogma is now starting to fall apart," he says. "We thought that if a woman's obesity was not affecting her ovulatory function, her fertility would be similar to a normal-weight woman's. But this does not appear to be true."
Dodson's own recent research at the Penn State Hershey College of Medicine confirmed that obese women undergoing infertility treatments needed higher doses of infertility drugs than normal-weight or overweight women.
Like the newly published study, all the women in the Penn State study had normal ovarian function.
"The issue of obesity and reproduction is complex, and we are only beginning to understand it," he says.
By Salynn Boyles
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- Fruits X Obesity
Fruits are low in calories and highly nutritional already grown on public places at increasing ratios to face obesity trends. Tree climbing also can be a body exercise for people harvesting fruits.
Fruits have around four times more water content than cookies and easily satisfy hunger taking less energy. Refrigerators full of fruits easily beat junkies.
In Brazil we are increasing fruit trees in the public areas changing the country to a large tropical orchard. Then, sidewalks, squares, parks, roadsides will be plenty of free fruits bearing appropriate food to fight spreading obesity. Free fruits are protected from the power of the economic system pursuing profitability.
Other countries are invited to join us on a fight against global obesity toward a Public Fructification. Brazil intends to become a developed country without common problems of a superpower.
We intend the rural area to conquer public areas making it full of fruits.
http://revver.com/watch/225528
Even carnivores can be convinced to eat more fruits yhy not humans?
http://revver.com/watch/218695 - Reply to this comment
Grammy winner Shakira on her music career, philanthropy and being sexy.




