Sunday, January 02, 2011, Muharram 26, 1432 A.H  
   HOME
   News in English
   News in Urdu
   Program Profiles
   GEO TV
   GEO UK
   GEO USA
   GEO ME
   GEO CANADA
   GEO EUROPE
   GEO JAPAN
   GEO SUPER
   AAG TV
   Corporate Profile
   Geo Tariff
   News Archive
   Contact Us
   FAQ
   FAQ Distribution
   Feedback
   GEO SKINS
   GEO RINGTONES
   GEO NewsAlert
   GEO Wallpapers
   Transcripts of Program
   Team GEO
   Exam Results
 
 
 GEO Health

 Family history of alcoholism raises obesity risk

 Updated at: 1034 PST,  Sunday, January 02, 2011
Family history of alcoholism raises obesity risk CHICAGO: People with a family history of alcoholism may be turning to high-calorie treats instead of booze to satisfy their addiction, U.S. researchers say, a change that could be fueling the obesity epidemic.

Because alcohol and bingeing on junk foods stimulate the same parts of the brain, it may be that people with a predisposition to alcoholism are replacing alcohol with junk foods, says the team from Washington University in St. Louis.

This is especially true for women, they said.

"Much of what we eat nowadays contains more calories than the food we ate in the 1970s and 1980s but it also contains the sorts of calories -- particularly a combination of sugar, salt and fat -- that appeal to what are commonly called the reward centers in the brain," Richard Grucza, who worked on the study published this month in the Archives of General Psychiatry, said in a statement.

"Alcohol and drugs affect those same parts of the brain and our thinking was that because the same brain structures are being stimulated, overconsumption of those foods might be greater in people with a predisposition to addiction."

Grucza's team compared addiction and obesity trends from a national survey conducted in 1991 and 1992 and in 2001 and 2002. Almost 80,000 people took part in the two surveys.

The team found that in 2001 and 2002, women with a family history of alcoholism were 49 percent more likely to be obese than those without a family history of alcoholism. The same was true of men to a lesser degree.

Grucza said the study suggests alcoholism and obesity are cross-heritable, much like alcoholism and drug addiction are. He said some of this may be related to changes in the environment, such as increased consumption of junk foods.

The study is part of a body of growing evidence for a link between alcohol abuse and obesity, particularly for women.

The alcoholism-overeating link might help explain rising obesity in the United States, which has doubled from 15 percent of the population in the late 1970s to 33 percent in 2004.

Drug firms are eyeing the alcohol-obesity link in hope of reaching the potentially huge U.S. market for obesity drugs.

Earlier this month, Orexigen Therapeutics and Takeda Pharmaceutical won backing from a U.S. advisory panel for the diet drug Contrave, which combines naltrexone, used to fight alcohol and drug addiction, and the antidepressant bupropion. The drug aims to target cravings, curb appetite and boost metabolism.

If approved by the U.S. Food Administration, the drug would be the first new weight-loss pill in a decade.
 
ShareThisBack     |    Send this story to friend
» GEO Pakistan
Gilani resolves to wage Jihad against corruption
Malik says govt unwilling to amend Blasphemy Law
Death toll in US drone strikes climbs to 19
Zardari signs 19th Constitutional Amendment Bill
Increase in POL price draws public anger
   
» GEO World
Police quell riot at British prison
Police sent in to quell prison riot
Obama condemns Egypt, Nigeria bombings
US says Egypt military resists change: WikiLeaks
21 killed in Egypt church attack
   
» GEO Business
People’s govt gives nation gift of petrol bomb on New Year
NS announces rise in profit rates
Govt drops petrol bomb on new-year eve
IMF issues stern financial warning to Pakistan
Tepid year-end for Sydney, China markets
   
» GEO Sports
Squaring series would be boost to Australia: Hussey
England chase series win in final Test
Clarke replaces injured Ponting as skipper
Injured Ponting to miss fifth Ashes Test
Pakistan outclass New Zealand by 103 runs
   
» Geo Entertainment
'Toy Story 3,' 'Social Network' top film review list
Vidya celebrates 33rd birthday today
A Minute With Bette Midler on New Year TV special
Oprah aims for "Mindful TV"
Salman-Kate to meet in Dubai
   
» GEO Health
Family history of alcoholism raises obesity risk
Eating lots of red meat ups women's stroke risk
Anti-polio drive extended in Punjab
Going under: Anesthesia closer to coma than sleep
Stubbing out cigarettes in Europe
   
» GEO Amazing and Interesting
China's online population rises to 450m
Odd 2010 Sound the vuvuzela for year of the mystic mollusk
One in five Britons to live to 100
Eat' em stratagem for lionfish invasion in Florida
World's oldest human remains claimed in Israel
   
 
Copyright © GEO TV. All rights reserved.