Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


2014 | 77 | 1 | 1-10

Article title

Obesity - a natural consequence of human evolution

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Obesity is considered a major epidemic of the 21st century. In developed countries, about 1/3 of adults are obese and another 1/3 overweight according to the oversimplified measure - the Body Mass Index. More precise indicators of adiposity: waist circumference, skinfolds, underwater weighing and absorptiometry indicate similar levels of fatness. Obesity per se does not necessarily lead to pathological states, nor to premature mortality. Recent results of large sample studies indicate that more than 1/3 of people classified as obese by fatness indices are physiologically normal. Others, however, suffer from a number of pathological conditions, common among them being the metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular disease. The classical explanation for increasing obesity is the positive energy balance - too much food intake and too little exercise. It seems, however, that this explanation is too simplistic. In societies, and in families, exposed to overeating and lazy lifestyles, about 1/3 of individuals have normal body mass and low levels of fatness, while others become obese. There is, therefore, individual variation in propensity for obesity. We have identified two specific variables differentiating fatness. People who have large lean trunk frames - large volumes of abdominal cavities and thus large gastrointestinal tracts - put on more subcutaneous fat than those with smaller trunk frames (Henneberg and Ulijaszek 2010). This may be a result of larger volumes of food required for antral extension to release ghrelin, or larger surface area of small intestines for food absorption. The second variable is concentrations of Alanine Transaminase, an enzyme responsible for conversion of an amino acid to a carbon skeleton that can be used in fat synthesis. Our study of 46000 young Swiss males (Henneberg, Rühli, Gruber and Woitek 2011) found consistent correlation between levels of Alanine Transaminase and body weight in groups of normal body mass individuals, overweight individuals and moderately obese individuals. Coupling this finding with the fact that among vegetarians, even those living in North America with overabundance of food and low levels of exercise, obesity and overweight are much less common than among non-vegetarians, we have now hypothesized that the increased obesity of modern affluent societies is a result of consumption of animal protein when energy needs are already covered by carbohydrates and fat consumed concurrently. Until the advent of agriculture, humans relied on consumption of a variety of terrestrial and aquatic animals supplemented by relatively small amounts of plant foods. In this situation our bodies became adapted to use proteins as a source of energy, and became efficient at storing occasional surpluses of amino acids by their deamination and conversion to fats. In the modern diets carbohydrates are abundant and provide, together with fats, energy required by human bodies, proteins after deamination are efficiently converted to fats. When new types of crops are introduced to mass production of cheap foods our bodies may not be able to react correctly to all their contents and some of the ingredients may cause additional fatness. An example of widespread recent introduction of industrially processed soybean products that correlates with prevalence of obesity across countries of the world is discussed

Publisher

Year

Volume

77

Issue

1

Pages

1-10

Physical description

Dates

published
2014-01-01
online
2014-02-20

Contributors

  • School of Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Australia
  • School of Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Australia

References

  • Aiello LC, Wheeler P. 1995. The expensive-tissue hypothesis - the brain and the digestive- system in human and primate evolution. Curr Anthropol 362(2):199-221.[Crossref]
  • Armstrong DB, Dublin LI, Wheatley GM, Marks HH. 1951. Obesity and its relation to health and disease. JAMA 147(11):1007-14.
  • Bersaglieri T, Sabeti PC, Patterson N, Vanderploeg T, Schaffner SF, Drake JA, Rhodes M, Reich DE, Hirschhorn JN. 2004. Genetic signatures of strong recent positive selection at the lactase gene. Am J Hum Genet 74:1111-20.[PubMed][Crossref]
  • Brown CD, Higgins M, Donato KA, Rohde FC, Garrison R, Oberzanek E, Ernst ND, Horan M. 2000. Body mass index and the prevalence of hypertension and dyslipidemia. Obesity 8(9):605-19.[Crossref]
  • Cabarello B. 2005. A nutrition paradox - underweight and obesity in developing nations. New Engl J Med 352(15):1514-16.
  • Chiang BN, Pearlman LV. 1969. Overweight and hypertension: a review. Circulation 39(1): 403-21.[Crossref][PubMed]
  • Durdin E. 2007 Lean shape and fatness: Lean frame size and skinfold thickness in South Australiam youth. Anatomical Sciences. The University of Adelaide.
  • Gofman JW. 1952. Obesity, fat metabolism and metabolic disease. Circulation 5(1):514-17.[Crossref]
  • Hengstler JG, Heimerdinger CK, Schiffler IB, Gebhard S, Sagemüller J, Taner B, Bolt HM, Oesch F. 2002. Dietary Topoisomerase - II poisons:contribution of soy prod ucts to infant leukemia? EXCLI Journal 1:8-14.
  • Henneberg M, Sarafis V, Mathers K. 1998. Human adaptations to meat eating. Human Evolution 13:229-34.[Crossref]
  • Henneberg M, Rühli FJ, Gruber P, Woitek U. 2011, Alanine transaminase individual variation is a better marker than socio- cultural factors for body mass increase in healthy males. FNS 2(1):1054-62.[Crossref]
  • Henneberg M, Ulijaszek SJ. 2010. Body frame dimensions are related to obesity and fatness: lean trunk size, skinfolds, and body mass index. Am J Hum Biol 22(1):83-91.[PubMed][Crossref]
  • Henneberg M, Veitch D. 2003. National size and shape survey of Australia. Kinanthreport 16:34-39
  • Henneberg M, Veitch D. 2005. Is obesity as measured by body mass index and waist circumference in adult Australian women in 2002 just a result of the lifestyle. Hum Ecol Special Issue 13(1):85-89.
  • Hounnou G, Destrieux C, Desme J, Bertrand P, Velut S. 2002. Anatomical study of the length of the human intestine. Surg Radiol Anat 24:290-94.[PubMed]
  • Hsieh PS. 2011. Obesity and carcinogenesis. J Cancer Res Pract 27(6):242-56.
  • Kannel WD. Gordon T, Castelli WP. 1979. Obesity, lipids and glucose intolerance. Am J Clin Nutr (32)6:1238-45.[PubMed]
  • Kunej T, Jevsinek Skok D, Zorc M, Ogrinc A, Michal JJ, Kovac M, Jiang Z. 2012. Obesity gene atlas in mammals. Journal of Genomics 1:45-55.
  • Lucas T, Henneberg M. 2013. Body frame variation and adiposity in development, a mixed-longitudinal study of ‘Cape Coloured’ children. Am J Hum Biol (doi: 10.1002/ajhb.22494).[Crossref][PubMed]
  • Ortega FB, Lee D, Katzmarzyk PT, Ruiz JR, Sui X, Church TS, Blair SN. 2013. The intriguing metabolically healthy but obese phenotype: cardiovascular prognosis and role of fitness. Eur Heart J 34(5):389-97.[WoS][PubMed][Crossref]
  • Roccisano D, Henneberg M. 2012. The contribution of soy consumption to obesity. FNS 3(2):260-66. [Crossref]
  • Rühli FJ, Henneberg M. 2013. New perspectives on evolutionary medicine: the relevance of microevolution for human health and disease. BioMed Central 11(1):115-21.
  • Saniotis A, Henneberg M. 2011. Medicine could be constructing human bodies in the future. Medical Hypotheses 77(4):560-64.[Crossref][PubMed][WoS]
  • Santos JL, Saus E, Smalley SV, Cataldo LR, Alberti G, Parada J, Gratacos M, Estivill X. 2012. Copy number polymorphism of the salivary amylase gene: Implications in human nutrition research. J Nutrigenet Nutrigenomics 5:117-31.[Crossref][WoS][PubMed]
  • Sawaya AL, Dallal G, Solymos G, de Sousa MH, Ventura ML, Roberts SB. 1995. Obesity and malnutrition in a shantytown population in the city of São Paulo, Brazil. Obes Res 3(2):107-15.[Crossref]
  • Schafer O. 1977. Are Eskimos more or less obese than other Canadians? A comparison of skinfold thickness and ponderal index in Canadian Eskimos. Am J Clin Nutr 30(10):1623-28.
  • Shepard RJ, Jones G, Ishii K, Kaneko M, Olbrecht AJ. 1969. Factors affecting body density and thickness of subcutaneous fat. Am J Clin Nutr 22(9):1175-89.
  • Seppanen CM, Csallany AS. 2006. The effect of intermittent and continuous heating of soybean oil at frying temperature on the formation of 4-hydroxy-2-trans-nonenal and other α-, β-unsaturated hydroxyaldehydes. JAOCS 83(2):121-22.
  • Spencer EA, Appleby PN, Davey GK, Key TJ. 2003. Diet and body mass index in 38 000 EPIC-Oxford meat-eaters, fish-eaters, vegetarians and vegans, Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 27(6):728-34.
  • Stephan C, Henneberg M. 2001. Medicine may be reducing the human capacity to survive. Med Hypotheses 57:633-37.[PubMed][Crossref]
  • Stein CJ, Colditz GA. 2004. The epidemic of obesity. J Clin Endocr Metab 89(6):2522-25.[Crossref]
  • Terry AH. 1923. Obesity and hypertension. JAMA 81(15):1283-93. Thieme H. 2005. The Lower Paleolithic art of hunting. In: C Gamble and M Parr, editors. The hominid individual in context: archaeological investigations of Lower and Middle Paleolithic landscapes, locales and artefacts. London: Routeledge. 115-13.[Crossref]
  • Tonsad S, Butler T, Yan R, Fraser GE. 2009. Type of vegetarian diet, body weight and prevalence of type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care 32(5):791-96. World Health Organisation. 2013. Obesity and overweight. http://www.who.int/gho/ncd/risk_factors/obesity_text/en/index.html (Accessed 30 Jan, 2013). World Health Organisation. 2013. Western Pacific region: obesity. http://www.wpro.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/obesity/en/index.html (Accessed 30 Jan, 2013).
  • Wrangham R. 2009. Catching Fire: how cooking made us human. New York: Harper Row.
  • Yamashita Y, Kawada SZ, Nakano H. 1990. Induction of mammalian topoisomerase ii dependent dna cleavage by nonintercalative flavonoids, genistein and orobol. Biochem Pharmacol 39(4):737-44. [PubMed]

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_anre-2014-0001
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.