Definitions & Classification - Sizing Up the Scale
- BMI Categories (kg/m²): $BMI = weight (kg) / height (m^2)$
- WHO: Overweight 25-29.9; Obese I 30-34.9; II 35-39.9; III ≥ 40
- Asian-Indian: Overweight 23-24.9; Obese ≥ 25
- Waist Circumference (Central Obesity Risk):
- Men: > 102 cm (> 90 cm Asian)
- Women: > 88 cm (> 80 cm Asian)
- Fat Distribution:
- Android (apple): Central fat, ↑ metabolic risk.
- Gynoid (pear): Peripheral fat (hips/thighs).

⭐ WHR (Waist-to-hip ratio) > BMI for CVD risk. Men > 0.90, Women > 0.85.
Etiology of Obesity - The Why & How
- Genetic Predisposition:
- Polygenic: FTO gene is a significant common variant.
- Monogenic (rare): e.g., MC4R mutations, leptin/leptin receptor defects.
- Environmental Influences:
- Obesogenic environment: Pervasive availability of high-calorie, palatable foods.
- Dietary patterns: High intake of processed foods, sugary drinks, unhealthy fats; low fiber.
- Lifestyle: Increased sedentary behavior, reduced physical activity.
- Socioeconomic Status: Complex interaction, influences food choices & activity.
- Medications Inducing Weight Gain:
- E.g., Corticosteroids, antipsychotics (olanzapine), some antidepressants, insulin.
⭐ The FTO gene is the strongest known common genetic susceptibility factor for obesity.
Hormonal Dysregulation - Appetite's Orchestra
Appetite is centrally regulated by the hypothalamus, primarily the arcuate nucleus. It houses:
- Anorexigenic POMC/CART neurons (promote satiety).
- Orexigenic AgRP/NPY neurons (promote hunger). Dysregulation of key peripheral hormones contributes significantly to obesity:
| Hormone | Source | Primary Action | Level/Effect in Obesity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leptin | Adipose tissue | Satiety | ↑, Resistance (key feature) |
| Ghrelin | Stomach | Hunger | Often not suppressed post-meal |
| Insulin | Pancreas | Glucose uptake, fat storage | ↑, Resistance |
| GLP-1 | Gut | Satiety, ↑ insulin secretion | Potentially ↓ |
| PYY | Gut | Satiety | Potentially ↓ |
| CCK | Gut | Satiety, ↓ gastric emptying | Potentially altered |
⭐ Leptin resistance, rather than deficiency, is a hallmark of common human obesity.

Adipose Tissue Dysfunction - More Than Storage
- Adipose tissue: an active endocrine organ, not just storage. Secretes adipokines:
- Adiponectin: ↓ in obesity; anti-inflammatory, insulin-sensitizing.
- Leptin: ↑ in obesity (leptin resistance); pro-inflammatory at high levels.
- Resistin: ↑; pro-inflammatory, promotes insulin resistance.
- TNF-α (Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha): ↑; pro-inflammatory, contributes to insulin resistance.
- IL-6 (Interleukin-6): ↑; pro-inflammatory.
- Increased macrophage infiltration (M1 polarization) fuels chronic low-grade inflammation.
- Lipotoxicity (excess free fatty acids) impairs cellular function, leading to insulin resistance.

⭐ Visceral adipose tissue is more metabolically active and pathogenic than subcutaneous adipose tissue.
Systemic Complications - Systemic Strikes
- Metabolic Syndrome: (IDF/AHA/NHLBI) Central obesity + 2 of:
- ↑Triglycerides: $\ge$ 150 mg/dL
- ↓HDL-C: < 40 mg/dL (men), < 50 mg/dL (women)
- ↑BP: $\ge$ 130 / $\ge$ 85 mmHg
- ↑Fasting Glucose: $\ge$ 100 mg/dL
- Endocrine: Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM), Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS).
- Cardiovascular: Hypertension, Coronary Artery Disease (CAD), Stroke.
- Hepatic: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD/NASH).
- Respiratory: Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA).
- Musculoskeletal: Osteoarthritis.
- Oncologic: ↑Risk: colorectal, breast (post-menopause), endometrial cancers.
- Lipids: Dyslipidemia (↑TG, ↓HDL, ↑small dense LDL).

⭐ Obesity is a leading cause of preventable non-communicable diseases worldwide.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Obesity: chronic, relapsing disease; multifactorial etiology (genetic, environmental, hormonal).
- Adipose tissue: an active endocrine organ secreting adipokines (leptin, adiponectin).
- Leptin resistance (not deficiency) is common, causing failed satiety signals.
- Ghrelin (stomach): primary orexigenic hormone, stimulates appetite.
- Insulin resistance: key metabolic derangement linking obesity to T2DM.
- Chronic low-grade inflammation (macrophage infiltration in adipose tissue) drives complications.
- Gut microbiome alterations (dysbiosis) implicated in energy homeostasis and obesity development.
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