Author: Dean Rouseberg
Time for reading: ~0
minutes
Last Updated:
August 08, 2022
Obese people are at higher risk of diverticulitis and bleeding diverticula. The latter are small sac-like extensions of the lining of the colon that prolapse between the fibers of the muscle tissue of the wall.
Obese people are at higher risk of diverticulitis and bleeding diverticula. The latter are small sac-like extensions of the lining of the colon that prolapse between the fibers of the muscle tissue of the wall. Their inflammation is diverticulitis. Both the infection and the bleeding associated with the condition can have serious consequences.
Several gastrointestinal diseases have been linked to obesity. Some of them, such as chronic inflammatory processes, predispose to complications of diverticulosis.
A study of 47,228 people found that the risk of diverticulosis was 78% higher in obesity and 219% more common in complications. The relationship between waist circumference and the incidence of diverticulitis and bleeding is also demonstrative - between 56 and 96% higher.