
Weight Loss Surgery May Add Years to Life
There's no doubt that stomach-stapling surgery leads to dramatic weight
loss. But new research shows that the procedure might also add years
to life.
As the number of obese people in the U.S. has soared, so has the popularity
of the surgery. In fact, East Carolina University researchers estimated
that the number of people undergoing weight-loss surgery increased from
40,000 in 2001 to 86,000 this year and will reach 140,000 next year.
Past research has shown that gastric bypass improves diabetes, high
blood pressure, and other diseases related to excess fat. But the effect
on a person's life span has been unknown, until now
To answer that question, researchers at New Hampshire's Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Medical Center first looked at data from previous research that showed
how much a weight an average person loses after having the surgery. Then
they looked at the average life expectancies of people at various heights
and weights. In this way, they could estimate how much the change in
weight caused by surgery would affect patients' life span.
The results suggest that most people eligible
for the surgery would benefit, says lead researcher G. Darby Pope,
MD, surgery resident at Dartmouth-Hitchcock. "By undergoing the surgery, they will gain
life years," he said. Pope presented the study this week at a meeting
of the American College of Surgeons in San Francisco.
People with a BMI, a measure of obesity that takes both height and
weight into account, over 25 are considered overweight. But according
to U.S. government guidelines, patients should have a BMI of at least
40, or a BMI of 35 with a related serious disease, to be eligible for
gastric bypass surgery. Most such patients are more than 100 pounds overweight.
The results varied according to the patients' age, gender, and body
mass index (BMI). According to the researchers, a woman with a BMI of
45 at age 40 would gain three years of life. A man of similar age and
size could expect to gain 3.9 years.
These results are better than those obtained by heart disease surgery,
Pope said. But he cautioned that no one should interpret these findings
literally. The actual effects of the gastric bypass surgery will vary
a lot from one individual to another.
Questions about the benefits of gastric bypass surgery will be answered
with more certainty by studies now under way on large groups of patients,
Pope says.
The surgery is getting more popular not only because more people are
obese, but also because surgeons have improved their techniques. In earlier
weight-loss surgery, doctors routed the digestive track past much of
the intestines, resulting in malnutrition.
In the kind of surgery in the Dartmouth-Hitchcock study, most of the
stomach is stapled shut so that food can only enter a small pouch at
the top. A branch of the intestines is connected to this pouch. (The
unused part of the stomach is connected to this branch downstream in
order to drain its fluids.)
Patients vomit if they overeat, but feel full with much less food.
Typically, they lose about three-quarters of their excess weight in the
first year, then gradually gain some back. After ten years or more, most
carry about half the excess weight they had before the surgery, says
Pope.
Patients must take nutritional supplements for the rest of their lives,
and there is a chance of dying from complications of the surgery. But
Pope and his colleagues took this risk of complications into account
in their study and the results suggest that the risk of death from the
procedure are much less than the risk of death from obesity.
Source: WebMD
The main problem with this type of surgery is it is only a short-term
solution. Usually overweight people have poor eating habits and do not
exercise. Having surgery does not correct either. It is vital to have
a change of lifestyle to undergo healthy weight loss. Without the change,
the body remains in an unhealthy state. Return to the top of the
"Weight Loss Surgery May Add Years To Your Life" page.
To help the body achieve a healthy
state, we suggest a good diet, moderate exercise, and a doctor recommended
supplement of HGH.
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