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Fat stored around the bottom, hips and thighs therefore gives the body a pear shape, but is away from the vital organs and therefore less harmful.
How to Prevent Heart Disease
The bottom line, however, is that unlucky genetics and bad childhood habits aside, the majority of heart disease is preventable. Exercising, managing blood pressure and avoiding smoking all help, but ultimately apples have to make the effort to shed their mid-waist cushioning. It seems it’s never been this fashionable to be a pear.
Unhealthy Body Shapes: What body Shape Am I?
• Measure the narrowest point of your waist, around your navel
• Measure the widest point of your hips, over your bottom
• Divide your waist measurement by your hip measurement to find a waist-hip ratio
A healthy ratio is less than 0.95 for men or 0.8 for women. If your ratio is higher, then unfortunately you’re an apple!
Heart Disease Information and Risk Factors: How to Get a Healthy Body Shape
So you’re convinced you need to lose weight to help prevent heart disease but don’t think you have the willpower? Don’t panic, because research also shows that you don’t need to eat less food or even fewer calories to lose kilos from around your middle; you just need to eat less trans fats.
Studies suggest that developing deadly heart disease inducing flab around your middle may be accelerated by eating trans fat. “Diets rich in trans fat can cause a redistribution of fat tissue into the abdomen and lead to a higher body weight even when the total dietary calories are controlled,” says Dr Lawrence L. Rudel, a professor of pathology and biochemistry at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
Over a period of 6 years, two different groups of monkeys were fed the exact same amount of calories, but one group’s diet included just 8% trans fat, while the second group stuck to the healthier monounsaturated variety. Rudel says that the trans fat monkeys developed over 7% more body fat, all on the abdomen.
Trans fat, found in products like margarines, crackers and biscuits, is formed when food manufacturers turn liquid oils into solid fats by adding hydrogen. We already know that the consumption of saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol increases your risk of coronary artery disease, but it now seems that simply switching to monounsaturated fats like olive oil could have the added benefit of transforming your body shape, too. Anyone for a pear?