Weather Tonight: -2°c Clear Night Morning: 3°c Mostly cloudy

Critics' Choice

Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quotePrecious is a new-style weepie but one that is much more bracing than depressingquote

Andrew O'Hagan Precious Theatre

Henry Hitchings

quoteIan McKellen is captivating throughout. He delights in the play’s gallows humour, yet is also maudlin and poignantquote

Henry Hitchings Waiting for Godot Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteSlight quibbles notwithstanding, this will set the West End’s stock riding highquote

Fiona Mountford Enron

Reader reviews

Film

Simon, London

quoteUtterly, utterly brilliant. You really are in for a treatquote

A Prophet Theatre

Ella, London

quoteThough 'Trilogy' has won rave reviews, I personally found myself exasperated after about an hourquote

Trilogy Restaurants

Dave A, London

quoteWe went on a quiet sunday evening and the food was excellent, but the experience let down by the service and ambiancequote

Mansons

Obese people lose IQ through 'Homer Simpson effect'

Last updated at 15:22pm on 15.10.06

 Add your view

 

It has already been nicknamed the "Homer Simpson effect" - being overweight could affect your intelligence, a study suggests.

A five-year study of more than 2,000 middle-aged people in France has found a possible link between weight and brain function.

Research published in Neurology, the journal of the American Academy of Neurology, found that people with a higher Body Mass Index (BMI) scored lower on average in cognitive tests within a sample.

The findings came in the week that Britain was dubbed the "fat man of Europe" following new figures.

The research led by Dr Maxime Cournot, of Toulouse University Hospital in France, used 2,223 healthy people aged 32 to 62 who sat four cognitive tests including word learning in 1996 and again in 2001.

Results from a word memory test showed that people with a BMI of 20 - considered to be a healthy level - remembered an average of nine out of 16 words.

Meanwhile, people with a BMI of 30 - inside the obese range - remembered an average of just seven out of 16 words.

While those whose BMI changed over the five years did not appear to see any change in their cognitive function, those who started out with a higher BMI did appear to show higher levels of "cognitive decline", Dr Cournot said.

"The study's findings may be due to a host of factors including the thickening and hardening of cerebral vessels because of obesity or possibly the development of insulin resistance," she suggested.

The apparent phenomenon has already been dubbed the "Homer Simpson effect" by some North American media.

BMI is calculated by setting a person's weight against their height to come up with a single figure - the higher the score the more overweight someone is.

According to World Health Organisation ranges, a BMI below 18.4 means that a person is considered underweight for their height, 18.5 to 24.9 is considered ideal, 25 to 29.9 is classed as overweight and a score above 30 signals obesity.

Meanwhile, a separate paper published in the same journal suggested a link between physical and mental fitness.

A group of 460 Scottish people who took part in a mental health survey in 1932 when they were 11 years old were re-tested at 79.

Report author Professor Ian Deary, of Edinburgh University, said: "Fitness contributes to better cognitive ability in old age.

"Thus, two people starting out with the same IQ at age 11, the fitter person at age 79 will, on average, have better cognitive function."


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (1)

 Add your view

How much does alcohol have an effect, seeing that alcohol also has an effect on both weight and brain function? Also cause and effect, are obese people likely to put on weight for the same reason that their brain function has reduced? Many more questions need to be asked. This could be the start of some more significant studies.

- Icedragon, Wales


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Clear Night
-2°c
Morning
Mostly cloudy
3°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & Property | London jobs | Educate London | Holiday Villas