Saturday, December 14, 2024
spot_img

Know how breastfeeding can prevent heart diseases in women

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

New York, April 12 :  Women who breastfeed more during their reproductive years are less likely to gain weight and build up fat around their abdomen or around the heart, and thus lower their risk of cardiovascular diseases, according to a study.
Various studies over the years have demonstrated that women who breastfeed have a lower risk for developing cardiovascular disease and diabetes. But the mechanisms behind these risks were not fully understood.
The new study, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, focussed on the presence of excess fat, specifically visceral and pericardial fat in lactating women for 30 years.
“After accounting for lifestyle behaviours and other risk factors across the life course, the lower visceral and pericardial fat among women with longer lactation persisted,” said Erica P. Gunderson, Professor at the Kaiser Permanente’s Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine in the US.
“… yes, breastfeeding more is actually beneficial to a woman’s health and can help to prevent cardiovascular disease,” said Duke Appiah, Assistant Professor at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Centre in the US.
Visceral fat is typically stored within the abdominal cavity near the stomach, liver and intestines. It can potentially increase the risk of developing heart attacks, Type 2 diabetes, stroke, breast and colorectal cancer and Alzheimer’s disease.
Pericardial fat is a deposit of fatty tissue located on the outside of the heart, and also may influence certain cardiovascular conditions.
Because these fats are related to insulin production and other cardio metabolic factors, weight change could influence the relationship between breastfeeding and these fats. An increase in pericardial fat also puts additional weight on the heart and can affect its contractivity, or how it beats, which also could influence other cardiovascular diseases, the researchers noted.
For the study, Appiah used a long-term study of cardiovascular disease that includes more than 5,000 adult women who were aged 18 to 30 years. The participants were monitored for more than 30 years.(IANS)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Katy Perry opens up on her Christmas tradition with fiance

Singer-songwriter Katy Perry has revealed that she likes to dress up as the Dr Seuss character and that...

SRK’s captivating voice adds power to Diljit’s latest track Don

The much-hyped track Don by Diljit Dosanjh in collaboration with Shah Rukh Khan has finally dropped and it’s...

Need to put big 1st innings score, says Gill

Brisbane, Dec 13: India batter Shubman Gill says the need to put up a big first innings total...

All We Imagine As Light nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at Critics Choice Awards

Filmmaker Payal Kapadia’s All We Imagine As Light has bagged a nomination in the Best Foreign Language Film...