fbpx

Is the Size of Your Waistline a Marker of Brain Health?

Could your waistline be a marker of brain health?

Your brain only weighs about three pounds. Yet, there’s a lot of gray and white matter packed into the small space that makes up your brain, and it’s a busy place! Your brain houses around 100 billion neurons that carry information and uses about 20% of the body’s total energy. It’s an energy demanding organ that has the ability to generate 23 watts of power each hour you’re awake.

Just as organs and tissues change over time, so does your brain. Brain volume peaks at around age 40 and declines by about 5% every decade until death, although this rate varies somewhat based on genetics and lifestyle. This brain shrinkage due to aging is something we’d like to avoid–for good reason! Research shows that loss of brain volume is correlated with a higher risk of memory problems and dementia.

How Big Is Your Brain?

The only way to know the exact size of your brain is to do an imaging study. But, not everyone wants to get an MRI to see how large their brain is. Are there non-invasive markers that correlate with brain size and loss of brain volume? According to a new study, waist circumference may provide valuable information about brain volume. As your waistline expands, your brain contracts.

In this study, researchers measured the body fat percentage, waist-to-hip ratio, and BMI of 9,652 middle-aged and older individuals. Almost 20% of the participants were obese. Armed with this data, the researchers used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure the participants’ brain volume in various parts of the brain. They also differentiated between brain volume for the two types of brain tissue–gray matter and white matter. They differ in color and function but both are important for healthy brain function.

Gray matter is found on the surface of the brain and is made up mostly of the bodies of nerve cells and include portions of the brain involved in hearing, emotions, decision making, vision, motor control, and perception. Important stuff!

White matter is located deeper in the brain and is comprised of axons, extensions of nerve bodies that carry information. These extensions are encased in myelin, a white, fatty substance, that insulates and speeds up the transmission of information. Without myelin, information would be carried at a snail’s pace. People who have multiple sclerosis sustain damage to the white matter in their brains and this leads to a decline in nerve function along various motor and sensory pathways over time.

In the study, researchers noted a link between high BMI and a high waist-to-hip ratio and reduced gray matter in the brain. Participants with higher BMIs and a high waist-to-hip ratio had lower gray matter brain volume relative to those with normal BMI and waist-to-hip ratio. Unlike waist size, BMI alone was only modestly associated with white matter brain volume. The researchers also found no correlation between BMI, waist-to-hip ratio and the volume of white matter in the subjects’ brains.

This data suggests that an expanding waist size could be a marker of greater gray matter shrinkage and worsening brain health. We know that large waist size is correlated with more visceral fat, a deep kind of fat that accumulates in the pelvis and around organs, like the liver. It’s a type of fat that fuels insulin resistance and indirectly fuels health problems like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The jiggly, white fat that accumulates under your skin may not look pretty but it mainly stores energy and doesn’t have the same sinister motives that visceral fat does. Visceral fat is a menace because it releases inflammatory compounds. In turn, these inflammatory compounds can damage blood vessels and increase insulin resistance. All fat in the human body isn’t created equal!

The Implications for Brain Health

The results of this study suggest that taming your waistline could pay off with better brain health. How large is too large? Your waist should measure only half your height or less. A large waist size is a marker of visceral fat, the inflammatory type of fat that releases tissue-damaging chemicals. Studies show a link between higher levels of visceral fat and health problems like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. A large waistline also associated with insulin resistance, a pre-diabetic state where the pancreas has to release more insulin to get glucose into cells. Plus, visceral fat accumulates deep in the pelvic cavity and is close to the portal vein which feeds directly to the liver. People with lots of visceral fat are at higher risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

The time to work on trimming the waistline is now as visceral fat increases with age. Fat distribution naturally changes after menopause and fat storage shifts to the middle of the body and is more likely to be stored as visceral fat. The key to minimizing visceral fat is to include high-intensity exercise in your routine. There’s some evidence that vigorous exercise has an edge for vanquishing visceral fat.

Watch the composition of your diet too. Processed foods, refined carbs, and sugar all make it harder to shed visceral fat. In terms of brain health, some studies show that a Mediterranean diet that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, whole grains, and fish protects against cognitive decline. A close cousin to the Mediterranean diet called the MIND diet helps preserve brain health and cognition as well. This diet is like the Mediterranean diet, but it emphasizes strongly what not to eat for brain health – margarine, fast food, fried food, sugary foods, and an abundance of red meat.

The Bottom Line

An expanding waistline may be a marker for a shrinking brain and future cognitive problems. Fortunately, exercise and a healthy diet can help tame both. Make sure you’re making brain-healthy lifestyle choices!

 

References:

Science Daily. “Excessive body fat around the middle linked to smaller brain size, study finds”
MedLine Plus. “White Matter of the Brain”
Sports Med. 2018 Feb;48(2):269-288. doi: 10.1007/s40279-017-0807-y.
Neurology Jan 2019, 10.1212/WNL.0000000000006879; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000006879.
Science First. “10 Interesting Facts About The Human Brain”
Metab Syndr Relat Disord. 2009 Aug;7(4):363-8. doi: 10.1089/met.2008.0060.
Diabetes Metab J. 2012 Jun;36(3):211-221.
Today’s Dietitian. Vol. 20, No. 6, P. 40. June 2018.

 

Related Articles By Cathe:

Body Weight, Bmi, Waist Size – Which is the Best Indicator of Health?

More Evidence That Eating on the Run is Bad for Your Waistline

Types of Body Fat: White Fat, Brown Fat, and Beige Fat and What They Mean for Your Waistline

Why Your Waist Circumference Is Important

Why It’s Important to Know Your Waist-to-Hip Ratio

New Study Reveals How Body Composition Impacts Your Breast Cancer Risk

A Better Way to Measure Body Fat?

Exercise is Good for Your Brain but What Type is Best?

Where Do You Store Your Fat? It Matters More Than You Think

Hi, I'm Cathe

I want to help you get in the best shape of your life and stay healthy with my workout videos, DVDs and Free Weekly Newsletter. Here are several ways you can watch and work out to my exercise videos and purchase my fitness products:

Get Your Free Weekly Cathe Friedrich Newsletter

Get free weekly tips on Fitness, Health, Weight Loss and Nutrition delivered directly to your email inbox. Plus get Special Cathe Product Offers and learn about What’s New at Cathe Dot Com.

Enter your email address below to start receiving my free weekly updates. Don’t worry…I guarantee 100% privacy. Your information will not be shared and you can easily unsubscribe whenever you like. Our Privacy Policy