PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study links obesity to elevated hypertension risk among young middle eastern women

Findings highlight need for targeted interventions in the region

2024-10-15
(Press-News.org) Obesity is a widespread public health challenge in the Middle East, maintaining prevalence in 54.2% of women and 31.4% of men in this region. Overweight and obese women have a higher risk of hypertension and cardiovascular risk factors than women with a standard BMI, according to an analysis of the ANCORS-YW STUDY presented at ACC Middle East 2024. The findings highlight the urgent need for targeted interventions that address socioeconomic determinants of health to reduce the cardiovascular risk burden in young Middle Eastern women.

“Young Middle Eastern women who are obese or overweight are facing a higher risk for the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and its associated risk factors like hypertension and Type Two diabetes,” said Mohammad Adnan Bani Baker, MD, a medical doctor at Prince Hamza Hospital in Amman, Jordan.

 

The researchers used data from the ANCORS-YW study to assess the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors associated with being overweight among young Middle Eastern women. The study had a total of 626 participants, with ages ranging from 18 years to 50 years old. The average age of the participants was approximately 42.9 years old. Participants were evaluated by health professionals, medical residents and medical students. Focusing on this demographic allowed the authors to better understand the early onset of cardiovascular risk factors associated with obesity in this life stage.

“This demographic is often underrepresented in global research and literature especially when it comes to the Middle East, despite the region’s high rates of obesity and cardiovascular disease. I was drawn to this topic because of the alarming rise in these conditions in Middle Eastern women, which poses a significant public health challenge,” Bani Baker said. “It is our hope that this study would bring attention and call for more targeted interventions to protect this vulnerable population.”

The results showed that overweight and obese women had a higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hypertensive disease of pregnancy and persistent weight gain after pregnancy. The study also found overweight and obese women were more likely to be older and have a low level of education.

To reduce the cardiovascular risk burden in this population, Bani Baker recommended a multi-disciplinary intervention that includes lifestyle modification programs, public health campaigns, educational programs and socioeconomic support. Lifestyle modification programs would promote a healthy diet and increased exercise, tailored to the cultural preferences in the Middle East. Raising awareness about these cardiovascular risk factors, public health campaigns would encourage early detection and treatment for hypertension and diabetes among young women in the Middle East. The educational programs would be targeted towards young women, especially those with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, and highlight the significance of weight management before and after pregnancy. Socioeconomic support should be provided at cardiovascular screenings to help women from lower educational and income levels overcome the barriers they face to access health care, Bani Baker said.

“Tailored preventive strategies, informed by gender-specific factors, are essential for achieving global cardiovascular health objectives,” Bani Baker said. “Our findings help health care providers to develop earlier prevention programs and raise awareness regarding the importance of weight management.”

About ACC Middle East 2024
The American College of Cardiology and the Egyptian Society of Cardiology will virtually host ACC Middle East 2024 on October 16-18, 2024. The conference offers the opportunity for attendees to learn about the latest cardiovascular science and evidence-based strategies directly impacting patient care, explore emerging trends and exchange ideas and information with experts from the region and around the world. Learn more about the conference and see the full agenda here.

Other Resources
CardioSmart, the ACC’s patient engagement program, provides information about heart conditions, resources to support important health care conversations and tools to build the patient-clinician partnership. Check out CardioSmart’s resources on heart disease in women and heart disease and obesity, including an Arabic language infographic. 

How to Register as Media
Please reach out to the ACC Press Office to request media registration for the virtual conference or to receive embargoed copies of posters. All registrants will be required to provide appropriate documentation and/or media credentials as per the ACC Media and Communications policies.

If you have questions, please contact the ACC Press Office at Katie Glenn, kglenn@acc.org.   

The American College of Cardiology (ACC) is the global leader in transforming cardiovascular care and improving heart health for all. As the preeminent source of professional medical education for the entire cardiovascular care team since 1949, ACC credentials cardiovascular professionals in over 140 countries who meet stringent qualifications and leads in the formation of health policy, standards and guidelines. Through its world-renowned family of JACC Journals, NCDR registries, ACC Accreditation Services, global network of Member Sections, CardioSmart patient resources and more, the College is committed to ensuring a world where science, knowledge and innovation optimize patient care and outcomes. Learn more at www.ACC.org or follow @ACCinTouch.

 

###

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How ‘vaccinating’ plants could reduce pesticide use and secure global food supplies

How ‘vaccinating’ plants could reduce pesticide use and secure global food supplies
2024-10-15
In a growing and changing world, we need to find ways of putting food on everyone’s table. Pesticides have enabled mass cultivation on an incredible scale, but they can have harmful secondary effects on humans and wildlife, and pests are rapidly evolving to overcome them. To overcome this challenge and develop the sustainable and resilient agriculture of the future, scientists writing in Frontiers in Science explore the potential of induced resistance. Like a vaccination for plants, it deliberately triggers a plant’s immune system, so that when the plant encounters a similar ...

Seven new frog species discovered in Madagascar: sounds like something from Star Trek

Seven new frog species discovered in Madagascar: sounds like something from Star Trek
2024-10-15
Seven New Frog Species Discovered in Madagascar: Sounds Like Something from Star Trek An international team of researchers have discovered seven new species of tree frogs that make otherworldly calls in the rainforests of Madagascar. Their strange, high-pitched whistling calls sound more like sound effects from the sci-fi series Star Trek. As a result, the researchers have named the new species after seven of the series' most iconic If you think all frogs croak, you’d be wrong. Seven newly discovered species from the tree frog genus Boophis, found across the rainforests of Madagascar, emit special bird-like whistling ...

New temperatures in two thirds of key tropical forest

New temperatures in two thirds of key tropical forest
2024-10-15
Two thirds of Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) in tropical forests are experiencing new temperature conditions as our climate changes, research shows. KBAs identify the most important places on Earth for species and their habitats. The new study – by Exeter, Manchester Metropolitan and Cambridge universities – assessed 30 years of temperature conditions below the forest canopy in KBAs in tropical forests worldwide. It found that 66% of KBAs in tropical forests have recently transitioned to new “temperature regimes” (more than 40% of temperature measurements being outside the range previously recorded ...

Fearful memories of others seen in mouse brain

Fearful memories of others seen in mouse brain
2024-10-15
NEW YORK, NY — How do we distinguish threat from safety? It’s a question important not just in our daily lives, but for human disorders linked with fear of others, such as social anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The microscope image accompanying this press release, from the laboratory of Steven A. Siegelbaum, PhD, at Columbia’s Zuckerman Institute, displays a powerful technique scientists used to help us find an answer. The scientists were investigating the hippocampus, a brain area that plays a key role in memory in humans and mice. Specifically, they focused on the CA2 region, which is ...

Rangers lead ground-breaking effort to monitor Uganda's lion population in critical stronghold

Rangers lead ground-breaking effort to monitor Ugandas lion population in critical stronghold
2024-10-15
In a new study published in Nature Communications Biology, wildlife rangers from the Uganda Wildlife Authority have demonstrated their ability to generate precise and reliable data on lion populations in Uganda’s Nile Delta, a critical stronghold for African lions. The study reveals that wildlife rangers, a critical component of global conservation efforts but often underutilised in scientific research, can play a pivotal role in the conservation science surrounding the world’s most beloved big cat. Rangers are effective at monitoring lions and are an underutilised resource The study showed rangers ...

Modern mass extinction in an Ecuadorean cloud forest found to be a mirage

Modern mass extinction in an Ecuadorean cloud forest found to be a mirage
2024-10-15
One of the most notorious mass extinction events in modern times occurred on a hilltop in coastal Ecuador in the 1980s. Ninety species of plants known from nowhere else on Earth—many of them new to science and not yet given a name—went extinct when the last cloud forests of the Centinela range were cleared for agriculture. The cautionary tale of Centinela has long been a driving force in the fight to save the world’s rainforests. But did it really happen? In a new study published in Nature Plants, an international team of botanists reveals that, indeed, it did not happen. The researchers – who spent years of scouring natural history museums, biodiversity databases, ...

HLA-DRB1*01:03 and severe ulcerative colitis

2024-10-15
About The Study: Among individuals with ulcerative colitis, the allele HLA-DRB1*01:03 was associated with severe ulcerative colitis requiring major operation, hospitalization, and systemic corticosteroid use compared with less severe disease. HLA-DRB1*01:03 has previously been linked to ulcerative colitis incidence. This study supports earlier, targeted genetic studies comparing patients with healthy controls reporting an association with total disease and severe disease requiring colectomy. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Marie Vibeke Vestergaard, MSc, email marievv@dcm.aau.dk. To access the embargoed study: Visit our ...

Quantum leap in suicide prevention: Professor Philippe Courtet's visionary approach unveiled in Genomic Press Interview

Quantum leap in suicide prevention: Professor Philippe Courtets visionary approach unveiled in Genomic Press Interview
2024-10-15
Montpellier, France – 15 October 2024. In a captivating Genomic Press Interview published on October 15, 2024, in the peer-reviewed journal Genomic Psychiatry (Genomic Press), Professor Philippe Courtet shares groundbreaking perspectives on suicide prevention and mental health care. As an influential PU-PH (Professeur des Universités-Praticien Hospitalier), he is a Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Montpellier, France, and head of emergency psychiatry at the University Hospital of, Professor Courtet stands at the forefront of ...

Need for streamlined miscarriage care in Canada

2024-10-15
Miscarriage, or early pregnancy loss, can have devastating emotional effects, but it is poorly managed in Canada. A review published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.231489 provides guidance to physicians on how to diagnose and manage this condition and calls for referral to outpatient early pregnancy assessment clinics (EPACs) as well as a compassionate approach. October 15 is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day. Data suggest that 15%–20% of all confirmed pregnancies result in miscarriage, with ...

Traces of ancient immigration patterns to Japan found in 2000-year-old genome

Traces of ancient immigration patterns to Japan found in 2000-year-old genome
2024-10-15
A joint research group led by Jonghyun Kim and Jun Ohashi of the University of Tokyo has demonstrated that the majority of immigration to the Japanese Archipelago in the Yayoi and Kofun periods (between 3000 BCE and 538 CE) came from the Korean Peninsula. The researchers analyzed the complete genome of a “Yayoi” individual and found that, among the non-Japanese populations, the results bore the most similarity to Korean populations. Although it is widely accepted that modern Japanese populations have a dual ancestry, the discovery provides insight into the details of immigration patterns to the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Photocatalytic olefin double bond cleavage acylation

Unveiling the impact of compound drought and wildfire events on PM2.5 air pollution in the era of climate change

A bioadhesive sponge inspired by mussels and extracellular matrix offers a new way to stop internal bleeding

Poorer health linked to more votes for Reform UK, 2024 voting patterns suggest

Loneliness and social isolation linked to heightened risk of death in those with cancer

Ditch ‘shrink it and pink it’ approach to women’s running shoes, manufacturers urged

Domestic abusers forge ‘trauma bonds’ with victims before violence begins

UK food needs radical transformation on scale not seen since Second World War, new report finds

New AI tool makes medical imaging process 90% more efficient

Nitrogen-fortified nanobiochar boosts soil health and rice productivity

Generative art enhances virtual shopping experience

Fluid-based laser scanning for brain imaging

Concordia study links urban heat in Montreal to unequal greenspace access

Hidden patterns link ribosomal RNAs to genes of the nervous system

Why does losing the Y chromosome make some cancers worse? New $6.5 million NIH grant could provide clues

Xiao receives David W. Robertson Award for Excellence in Medicinal Chemistry

Boron isotopes reveal how nuclear waste glass slowly dissolves over time

Biochar helps Mediterranean vineyards hold water and fight erosion

Checking the quality of materials just got easier with a new AI tool

Does hiding author names make science fairer?

Fatal Attraction: Electric charge connects jumping worm to aerial prey

Rice physicists probe quark‑gluon plasma temperatures, helping paint more detailed picture of big bang

Cellular railroad switches: how brain cells route supplies to build memories

Breast cancer startup founded by WashU Medicine researchers acquired by Lunit

Breakthrough brain implant from NYU Abu Dhabi enables safer, more precise drug delivery

Combining non-invasive brain stimulation and robotic rehabilitation improves motor recovery in mouse stroke model

Chickening out – why some birds fear novelty

Gene Brown, MD, RPh, announced as President of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery and its Foundation

Study links wind-blown dust from receding Salton Sea to reduced lung function in area children

Multidisciplinary study finds estrogen could aid in therapies for progressive multiple sclerosis

[Press-News.org] New study links obesity to elevated hypertension risk among young middle eastern women
Findings highlight need for targeted interventions in the region