- :: Atom & Cosmos
- :: Body & Brain
- :: Earth
- :: Environment
- :: Genes & Cells
- :: Humans
- :: Life
- :: Matter & Energy
- :: Molecules
- :: Science & Society
- :: Other Topics
- :: Science News For Kids
Being fat may diminish mental performance, studies find — a problem that worsens with age. But among elderly women, where fat is deposited may matter. To wit: The big apple is sharper than the obese pear.
Genetics dictates where people preferentially accumulate body fat. For most it’s around the belly. Among the obese, these apple-shaped individuals tend to run a bigger risk of developing heart disease than do pears — people who deposit most of their excess fat at the hips and thighs. For a host of reasons, physicians had expected that if body shape affected mental performance, apples would again prove the bigger losers.
In fact, the opposite appears true, Diana Kerwin of Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago and her colleagues report online July 14 in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
The team pored over data collected from more than 8,700 women, all 65 to 79 years old. These were a healthy subset of incoming participants to the Women’s Health Initiative study. This long-running trial at 40 medical centers across the country has been investigating the role of hormone-replacement therapy and diet on risk of heart disease, fractures and certain cancers.
Each woman was administered a test of memory and reasoning known as the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination, or 3MSE. Kerwin’s team correlated a participant’s score with her shape and her height-adjusted weight — something known as body-mass index, or BMI. BMI values were divided into six categories, with 1 being lean and 6 morbidly obese.
Most women scored within the normal range of 90 to 100 on the 3MSE, Kerwin notes. However, among pear-shaped overweight women, for every increase in BMI category, the 3MSE score dropped by roughly half a point. This held even after adjusting for potentially confounding factors such as age, education and cardiovascular disease risk. How memory and reasoning might have altered over time remains unknown, Kerwin observes, since women took the cognitive test only once, upon entering the study.
Among apples, the fatter they were, the higher their mental-acuity score, although the difference from slim to morbidly obese was only around 2 points out of 100 possible — and the biggest increase occurred between the slim and normal-weight categories.
“Apples were better? That is surprising,” says geriatrician John Morley of the Saint Louis University School of Medicine. “It’s very difficult to explain,” he says, because based on blood levels of triglycerides, or fats, “the higher levels (which you get in the apple, not in the pear) interfere with memory.” On the other hand, he notes, “fat produces leptin [a hormone that plays a role in regulating fat storage]. And we’ve shown that leptin increases memory. It’s really the fat around the stomach that is a leptin producer.”
Kerwin says her data indicate the link between body shape and cognition is complex. For instance, slim to normal-weight, very pear-shaped women had the highest mental-acuity scores and lean apples the lowest. Overall, normal-weight women tended to outperform overweight women of either shape. So, she argues, there’s no advantage in normal-weight women becoming big apples.
Found in: Body & Brain, Nutrition and Science & Society

-
C. Brownlee. Cognition down in apple-shaped seniors. Science News, Vol. 168, December 3, 2005, p. 366. Available online:
[Go to]
- D.R. Kerwin, et al. The cross-sectional relationship between body mass index, waist-hip ratio, and cognitive performance in postmenopausal women enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. Posted online July 14, 2010.
- Changing one of nature's constants
- Light-harvesting complexes do it themselves
- DVDs don’t turn toddlers into vocabulary Einsteins
- String theory entangled
- Microbe’s survival manual



As a female apple it SEEMS (no hard numbers) to me that a heftier portion of my apple shaped friends are more interested in learning new things compared to my pear shaped friends.
While I do recall reading in the past of the importance of estrogens to brain function, perhaps some androgen levels may create a behavioral boost which comes in handy for a willingness to quest into new concepts.
Of course, that is not based on anything beyond a rough impression, but I suspect that more than pure physiology may be at work here, and both curiosity and continual learning are very good for mental acuity.
All of us, of any gender, of course have both estrogens and androgens, and of course the body can alter each back and forth into members of both groups,
but IF we female apples have more genetic demand for a high proportion to be androgens then perhaps when we get underweight we simply don't have enough circulating estrogens for optimal brain performance since fat is also an endocrinological organ which produces estrogens, and since estrogen is involved in brain functions (unless that concept has altered since I last read on the topic).
Again, nothing more than off-the-cuff speculation with numerous things to need checking before it could hope of bearing any weight...
Adrenal failure leads to that dreaded belly flab, low back pain due to muscle failure. Thyroid, adrenals, pituitary, entire endocrine system works together & off each other. Like the amino acids (raw honey has all 22) & the minerals in the crop soil, the lowest amount of any required nutrient is the controlling factor. Lack just one required & none can function.
Please login or register to participate.