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Sad about being short? Study shows tall people at risk of several serious health conditions

While tall people are at lower risk of developing coronary conditions, height may increase risk of many non-cardiovascular...

Web Desk
June 06, 2022
Tall people at risk of several serious health conditions. — Telegraph
Tall people at risk of several serious health conditions. — Telegraph


There is a significant relationship between a person's height and their health and people who are taller may be at risk of developing certain health conditions as compared to shorter people, a study has shown.

According toScience Daily, the study was conducted by the US Department of Veteran Affairs' Million Veteran programme. The results of the genetic study showed that tall people have a higher risk of developing peripheral neuropathy, atrial fibrillation, and circulatory disorders but a lower risk of coronary heart diseases.

Dr Sridharan Raghavan from the VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System was leading the study. While the results are interesting, more research is required to allow it to bring a change to the healthcare system, he explained.

Raghavan said that height could be a risk factor for certain conditions and "protective" for others.

It is unclear whether the correlation between tall height and health conditions necessarily has a biological basis.

While genes contribute to a person's height, other factors like nutrition, socioeconomic status, and demographics like age and gender also play a part. This is why it is risky to determine the connection between height and health risks.

In the study, 280,000 veterans were made part of the research in this project. The research found that genetically predicted height in White patients could be linked to127 different medical conditions.

The findings of the study showed that tall people were also at a lower risk of developing high blood pressure andhigh cholesterol. However, height may increase the risk of several non-cardiovascular diseases.

Peripheral neuropathy, for instance, damages the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord. This study and others suggest a relatively higher risk of nerve issues in tall people.

Researchers linked other conditions associated with neuropathy, such aserectile dysfunction and urinary retention, withgenetically predicted height.

Other serious conditions likechronic leg ulcers, cellulitis, skin abscesses, and osteomyelitis were also found to be linked with tall height. Circulatory conditions such asvaricose veins and thrombosis are also dominantly found in tall individuals, the study said.

In women, height increases the risk of asthma and non-specific nerve disorders.


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