Relations (1)
related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts
Obesity and neurodegenerative diseases are frequently studied together as co-occurring health outcomes linked by shared physiological risk factors, including chronic inflammation [1], sleep deficiency [2], and metabolic dysfunction [3]. They are both categorized as major clinical conditions within the frameworks of Network Physiology [4] and the Human Physiolome maps [3], and are jointly tracked in morbidity and mortality statistics [5].
Facts (5)
Sources
The New Field of Network Physiology: Building the Human ... frontiersin.org 2 facts
claimNetwork Physiology research investigates the pairwise and network interactions of organ systems and sub-systems, and how these interactions manifest in aging, exercise, sports, and various clinical conditions such as concussion, traumatic brain injury, cardiac arrest, sleep and neurodegenerative disorders, diabetes, obesity, maternal-fetal and neonatal care, sepsis, coma, and multiple organ failure.
claimThe Human Physiolome maps are associated with diseases including neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders, sleep and circadian disorders, cancer, diabetes and obesity, concussion and brain trauma, coma, cardiac arrest, sepsis, and multiple organ failure.
A Consensus Proposal for Nutritional Indicators to Assess ... - Frontiers frontiersin.org 1 fact
procedureThe 'Diet-Related Morbidity/Mortality Statistics' indicator uses two primary parameters: (1) the prevalence of individuals with physician-diagnosed obesity, cardiovascular diseases (CHD, stroke, hypertension), type II diabetes, osteoporosis, neurodegenerative diseases, and obesity-related cancers; and (2) disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) as a measure of disease burden associated with nutrition-related factors like high blood pressure, high cholesterol (total and LDL), and high blood sugar (insulin resistance/diabetes).
Why At Least 7 Hours of Sleep Is Essential for Brain Health medicine.utah.edu 1 fact
claimSleep deficiency is linked to serious health outcomes, including obesity, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, stroke, and neurodegenerative disorders.
How to reduce inflammation in the body - MD Anderson Cancer Center mdanderson.org 1 fact
claimChronic inflammation is linked to heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, obesity-related metabolic dysfunction, some neurodegenerative disorders, autoimmune disorders, and cancers.