People who have agonized over their fat thighs might be able to relax a bit. Danish doctors said on Thursday they found patients with the thinnest thighs died sooner than the more endowed.
Obesity, age, smoking and other factors did not reduce the effect, the researchers reported in the British Medical Journal.
“Our results suggest that there might be an increased risk of premature death related to thigh size,” Berit Heitmann of Copenhagen University Hospital and Peder Frederiksen of Glostrup University Hospital wrote.
The explanation may lie in many different studies that suggest where you gain your weight is a strong factor in how it affects health. People with lots of abdominal fat — wrapped in and around the internal organs — appear to be at higher risk of heart disease, diabetes and other illnesses.
So-called pear-shaped people may have lower risks, even if they have more body fat overall.
Heitmann and Frederiksen studied 1,436 men and 1,380 women taking part in a larger medical research study who were examined in 1987 and 1988, then watched them for more than 12 years.
Men and women whose thighs were less than 24 inches (60cm) in circumference were more likely to die during those 12 years, they found.
Those with the thinnest thighs — less than 18 inches (46cm) — were more than twice likely to have died within 12 years, they reported in the study.
However, Ian Scott of Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane, Australia, disagreed, saying the statistics in the Danish study were too limited.
He said larger studies would need to be done before doctors could decide that thigh measurement was any kind of good predictor of health.
“It seems unlikely that thigh circumference will be clinically useful,” Scott wrote in a commentary.
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