Is There an Obesity Paradox in Critical Illness? Epidemiologic and Metabolic Considerations.
Irene KarampelaEvangelia ChrysanthopoulouGerasimos Socrates ChristodoulatosMaria DalamagaPublished in: Current obesity reports (2021)
Data from meta-analyses and recent studies corroborate the obesity-related survival benefit in critically ill patients as well as in selected populations such as patients with sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome, but not trauma. However, this finding warrants a cautious interpretation due to certain methodological limitations of these studies, such as the retrospective design, possible selection bias, the use of BMI as an obesity index, and inadequate adjustment for confounding variables. Main pathophysiologic mechanisms related to obesity that could explain this phenomenon include higher energy reserves, inflammatory preconditioning, anti-inflammatory immune profile, endotoxin neutralization, adrenal steroid synthesis, renin-angiotensin system activation, cardioprotective metabolic effects, and prevention of muscle wasting. The survival benefit of obesity in critical illness is supported from large meta-analyses and recent studies. Due to important methodological limitations, more prospective studies are needed to further elucidate this finding, while future research should focus on the pathophysiologic role of adipose tissue in critical illness.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- meta analyses
- weight gain
- high fat diet induced
- adipose tissue
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- type diabetes
- systematic review
- case control
- high fat diet
- skeletal muscle
- body mass index
- intensive care unit
- randomized controlled trial
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- machine learning
- mechanical ventilation
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- electronic health record
- acute kidney injury
- brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- data analysis
- trauma patients