Girls with big breasts have a 68 percent higher chance
of developing diabetes by middle age than their small-breasted
counterparts, according to a new study published in the Canadian
Medical Association Journal.

The decade-long study to find link
between big breasts and diabetes development among nurses in the US
shows that those with bigger breasts at 20 are at 68 percent higher
risk of developing the disease in later years.

Joel Ray,
professor of medicine at the University of Toronto and a scientist at
the local St. Michael's Hospital, said this was “the broad conclusion”
of his research team on the basis of the study that was published
recently.

“Our
findings are based on data from the Nurses Health Study II project in
14 American states. In a nutshell, 92,102 nurses were studied for link
between their breast size and their chances of developing diabetes by
the age of 35. The bigger their breasts are at the age of 20, the
bigger their chances of developing diabetes,” Ray told IANS.

However,
Ray was quick to add that the breast size could be one of the factors,
apart from smoking, family history, diet and ethnicity that trigger
diabetes in women. 

“Obesity remains a big factor. Obese women tend to have larger breasts, thereby 
becoming more prone to diabetes,” he said.

>From these findings, he said, it will be interesting to study how breast fat 
>influences insulin resistance.

Ray emphasized that their research was preliminary at this stage and should not 
be taken at its face value.

Women should not think about breast surgeries to minimize their chances of 
developing diabetes. 

“It is an interesting possibility that needs to be studied before we can say 
anything,” he said.

During
the study, he said, it was found that nurses with a family history of
diabetes or those who smoked were more prone to developing the disease.

“Out of 92,102 nurses in the decade-long study, 1,844 developed diabetes.”

The
study also showed that big-breasted nurses reported being heavier than
others at young ages of five and 10, and entering puberty earlier. Ray
said there is a definite link between early puberty among fat girls,
insulin resistance and their predisposition to diabetes.

Breast
tissue is extremely sensitive to hormones. Since insulin is a hormone,
there is resistance to it by breast tissue, he said. A bigger breast
means more insulin resistance and more chances of diabetes.

Ray said he was not sure how important these findings were for Indian and South 
Asian women.

“Since
this study was conducted on mostly white women, I won't say how
significant it is for Indian and South Asia women. Diabetes in India is
becoming rampant because of genetic and other reasons,” he said. 
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