Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Urban noise can trigger obesity, heart disease

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jun, 2014 02:09 PM
    Are you living in the vicinity of a busy highway or an airport or even a hospital? Constant noise emanating from heavy city traffic, industrial machinery, aeroplanes and loud music may leave one at a higher risk of obesity and cardiovascular diseases.
     
    In a four-year project, researchers from Karolinska University in Sweden found that the louder the traffic noise, the greater the increase in people’s waist size.
     
    “There was nearly a centimetre increase for every 10-decibel rise in the noise levels,” the study authors noted.
     
    The effects of noise pollution are even felt by babies in the womb.
     
    “We are gathering more and more evidence that noise in the environment can have a direct effect on health,' said professor Adrian Davis, one of the authors of the study that appeared in the journal Lancet.
     
    Noise pollution affects stress hormones including cortisol which raises likelihood of pounds packing on around the waist. 
     
    This visceral fat also pushes up heart attack risk.
     
    In another study, researchers from Utrecht University in the Netherlands examined data from more than 68,000 births.
     
    They found that for every six-decibel increase in traffic noise, there was a drop of 15g to 23g in birth weight.
     
    Low birth weight is linked to a range of long-term health problems, including high blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease.
     
    It also affects school children's academic performance, researchers said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk
    Are you on a strict diet to reduce body fat that may also help lower breast cancer risk? Better take up exercise as researchers have found that physical activity offers additional benefit, beyond the effect of weight loss in reducing cancer risk.

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk

    Believe it! Men May Lactate Too

    Believe it! Men May Lactate Too
    Men may not be naturally wired to breast feed their babies but in certain circumstances, they may secrete milk too.

    Believe it! Men May Lactate Too

    Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?

    Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?
    Your pet can tell a lot about you and if a new study is to be believed, people with dogs at home are more energetic but feline lovers are more intelligent.

    Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?

    Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour

    Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour
    To get a blonde look, you soon may not need to visit a hair clinic or a specialist barber. A single-letter change in the genetic code is enough to generate blonde hair in humans, fascinating research shows.

    Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour

    Speaking two languages keeps brain's ageing at bay

    Speaking two languages keeps brain's ageing at bay
    If you speak more languages than one, it is good not only for your social image but also for the health of your brain, a research said.

    Speaking two languages keeps brain's ageing at bay

    Can't avoid salty meal? Blame your genes

    Can't avoid salty meal? Blame your genes
    Even though you may risk hypertension and heart disease but can't do without that extra pinch of salt in your meal, blame it on your genes for a gene related to taste pathways could be conspiring against you, researchers have found.

    Can't avoid salty meal? Blame your genes