Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Is obesity contagious?

While it is true that the current generations are eating more fats and artificial flavorings/preservatives than past ones, scientists have still been at a loss to explain why more Americans and Europeans are obese than ever before. Not merely overweight, mind you, which is explainable by the rise of the couch potato, but actually obese. Many theories have been advanced, but now one is gaining the attention of more and more doctors. Obesity, in some cases, may be contagious - passed from person to person by a form of the common cold. A recent study showed that specific forms of one virus can cause fat cells to multiple unusually quickly, and laboratory animals infected with the virus grew fatter than uninfected controls, even when fed the same amount of food.

Of course, this is no excuse for failing to exercise or try to eat better. But it may provide a new therapy for those who have found it difficult to shed the pounds.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This information is the worst nightmare of the smugly thin. Now, anyone can be hit with the obesity virus and have to really contend with the struggles and frustrations of trying to get to and maintain "normal".
Maybe being overweight is not a "moral flaw" after all.

This could also reverse some of the momentum in the health care debate to not cover ailments that are related to obesity.