Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Probiotics may help gastric bypass patients

Hueytown, AL
Probiotics are sometimes prescribed by doctors to improve the body’s response to antibiotics by increasing levels of gut bacteria used by the body, but new research suggests they may play a complementary role in another treatment.

Researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine included probiotics as part of a regimen for patients who had recently undergone gastric bypass surgery.

They found that patients who used the "good bacteria" were more likely to lose weight than study subjects in the control group, and were also able to limit vitamin B12 deficiencies associated with the procedure.

Dr. John Morton, the study’s co-author, says that the research was initiated in response to obese patients who complained that it was difficult to eat properly after surgery because of the effects on the digestive tract.

"A lot of people aren’t aware that we all carry around a lot of bacteria in our intestines and that they’re extremely helpful in aiding digestion," he added. "And I thought, ‘Well, if we give these patients probiotics, then maybe we can improve these symptoms."

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Is gastric bypass surgery a diabetes fix?

Los Angeles, CA

Within days of various weight-loss surgeries, blood sugar levels become easier to manage -- or are normal.
The discovery came about by accident more than a decade ago: Weight-loss surgery often led to dramatic improvements in the control of Type 2 diabetes, often before patients had even left the hospital.

Today, evidence of the connection is so solid that some doctors say surgery should be considered as a treatment for diabetes, regardless of a person's weight or desire to lose weight.

"We thought diabetes was an incurable, progressive disease," says Dr. Walter J. Pories, a professor of surgery at East Carolina University and a leading researcher on weight-loss surgery. "It . . . is a major cause of amputations, renal failure and blindness. This operation takes about an hour, and two days in the hospital, and these people go off their diabetes medication. It's unbelievable."

As many as 86% of obese people with Type 2 diabetes find their diabetes is gone or much easier to control within days of having weight-loss surgery, according to a meta-analysis of 19 studies published earlier this year in the American Journal of Medicine (78% of patients with a remission of diabetes and 86.6% with remission or improvement). But experts still aren't sure why obesity surgery helps resolve Type 2 diabetes or how long the effect might last. And they disagree on how big a role surgery should take in treating the illness.

"We are going from seeing the results to understanding why it happens," said Dr. Santiago Horgan, director of the Center for the Treatment of Obesity at UC San Diego.

This much is clear: Patients who have weight-loss surgery begin to lose weight rapidly, which by itself improves Type 2 diabetes, allowing diabetics to more easily control their blood glucose levels. But something else appears to be occurring as well.

There is strong evidence that surgery -- especially gastric bypass surgery, which makes the stomach smaller and allows food to bypass part of the small intestine -- causes chemical changes in the intestine, says Dr. Jonathan Q. Purnell, director of the Bionutrition Unit at Oregon Health & Science University. The small intestine has been thought of simply as the place where digestion occurs.

But researchers now suspect it has other functions related to metabolism. Surgery somehow alters the secretion of hormones in the gut that play a role in appetite and help process sugar normally.

Multiple studies in humans and animals indicate that surgery triggers reductions in ghrelin, the hormone that stimulates hunger, and elevates levels of peptide YY and glucagon-like peptide-1, both of which act as appetite suppressants. Another theory is that surgery might alter the expression of genes that regulate glucose and fatty-acid metabolism.

"There are these known components that improve glucose metabolism," Purnell says. "But there are very likely other things happening as well."

Which procedure?

The effect on diabetes can depend on the type of weight-loss surgery that is performed, says Pories, past president of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. The highest rates of diabetes remission are seen in people who have gastric bypass -- about 83%.

But diabetes also tends to resolve or improve in 50% to 80% of people who have lap-band surgery, in which a band is placed around the top of the stomach to make it smaller, he says. And there is some evidence that the effect occurs a newer type of weight-loss surgery called gastric sleeve, in which a portion of the stomach is removed so that it takes the shape of a tube or sleeve.

Evidence suggests the effect on diabetes can last for an extended period or even indefinitely, particularly if people don't regain a lot of weight.

"There is durability, but we also know that some people do get the disease back again," Purnell says. "Weight rebound is probably one factor. We also know that diabetes is a progressive disease. It may depend on how long you've been diagnosed with diabetes. If it's early on, I think the durability may be better."

It's not clear yet why people have different responses.

"There is some evidence that African Americans don't respond as well as Caucasians, and men don't respond as well as women," Pories says.

Despite the unknowns, the evidence that a majority of people experience long-term improvement in blood glucose control suggests the surgery could eventually play a greater role in the treatment of obese people with Type 2 diabetes. The majority of American adults with Type 2 diabetes are overweight.

Traditional medical guidelines, which insurers follow, state that weight-loss surgery should be restricted to patients with a body mass index of 35 or greater who have related health problems. But some diabetes and nutrition experts think those recommendations don't go far enough. Several studies are underway, or will soon begin, to examine the benefits of surgery in people with Type 2 diabetes and a BMI of less than 35.

"We may have a cure for diabetes," Santiago says. "So we need to ask how medical therapies and surgery can help each other in the treatment of diabetes."

Studies from several other countries show that surgery also results in remission of diabetes for people who are not morbidly obese. There is even discussion, particularly in other countries, of performing weight-loss surgery for people with Type 2 diabetes who are not overweight.

Not without risks

In the United States, weight-loss surgery is still largely viewed as a cosmetic procedure and obesity as a lifestyle issue, not a chronic disease. Moreover, weight-loss surgery carries risks. The death rate is about one per 200 operations and severe complications can occur, including blood clots, infections related to surgery, and the need for corrective surgery due to leaks at the staple lines.

Other complications include vitamin and mineral deficiencies, dehydration, gallstones, kidney stones, hernia and low blood sugar.

However, a risk-benefit analysis published in April in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. by Purnell and a colleague suggests that if the number of gastric bypass operations performed on diabetic patients increased to 1 million per year, as many as 14,310 diabetes-related deaths might be prevented over five years.

Surgery also leads to other health benefits besides weight loss and better control of diabetes. Patients often see improvements in blood pressure, cholesterol, gastroesophageal reflux disease and sleep apnea.

"Doctors say, 'If I can lower glucose by medications, why send patients to surgery?' " Purnell says. "Surgery, however, allows people to have meaningful and sustained weight loss and their diabetes is better. There are risks involved with surgery, obviously, but it makes sense, to me, to do surgery."

The discovery of the gut hormones that play a role in appetite and insulin regulation may also lead to new medications for Type 2 diabetes, Pories says.

"You can't operate on 31 million Americans," he says. "But if we understood this mechanism and what are the molecules secreted by the intestines that cause diabetes, then we can cure it with a pill. I would not be surprised if, in the next five years, we have new medications."

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Beverly Hills bariatric surgeon claims he performs most lap band surgeries

Beverly Hills, CA
Dr. Michael Feiz, lead surgeon at the Beverly Hills Comprehensive Weight Loss Center, has performed more Lap Band surgeries than any other doctor. For overweight Los Angeles residents, Lap Band surgery is the answer they have been looking for to shed the unhealthy weight and return to a more active life. Performed laparoscopic with almost no scarring, Lap Band surgery has the added benefit of enabling the patient to control their weight loss progress. Unlike gastric bypass surgery, Lap Band surgery does not involve the permanent reduction in size of the stomach. Instead, a small cinched section of plastic is placed around the upper area of the stomach, creating a temporarily shrunken stomach area for food to pass through. The other factor that makes Lap Band surgery so unique from gastric bypass is that the Lap Band is connected to a port that enables adjustment of the amount of solid food that can pass through the stomach. Finally, Lap Band
surgery is so attractive because it can be easily reversed by simply removing the Lap Band if something goes amiss.

A pioneer in successful Lap Band surgery, Dr. Michael Feiz of the Beverly Hills Comprehensive Weight Loss Center has performed the world's most cosmetic Lap Band surgery. With degrees from UCLA, New York Medical College and a residency and fellowship at USC Medical Center and Cedars Sinai, Dr. Feiz is highly trained and skilled in Bariatric and minimally invasive surgery. All prospective Lap Band surgery patients who visit the Beverly Hills Comprehensive Weight Loss Center must first undergo a full 360 degree evaluation of their health - mental and physical - as well as their habits and attitudes toward exercise and food.

Typical Los Angeles Lap Band surgery patients lose multiple pounds per week, but the real success after Lap Band surgery is keeping the weight off. The Beverly Hills Comprehensive Weight Loss Center ensures that their Lap Band surgery patients lose the weight and keep it off. So many people turn to the Beverly Hills Comprehensive Weight Loss Center due to the success rate of this center.

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Single-incision gastric sleeve, gastric bypass surgery alternative


Houston, TX
There's a new weight loss surgery option available in Houston that doctors say is less invasive and allows patients a faster recovery. It could offer patients as much weight loss as the "gold standard" weight loss procedure, gastric bypass.

Denise Abrego-Carter is about to undergo a new procedure to help her lose weight. It's called the single-incision gastric sleeve.

She said, "He guarantees me about 70-80 pounds."

The "sleeve" procedure is similar to the more radical gastric bypass. But unlike gastric bypass, the "sleeve" requires only one incision and is a less complicated surgery.

Dr. Sherman Yu, a Memorial Hermann bariatric surgeon, explained, "With this newer procedure people are actually losing just as much weight as a gastric bypass, but the risks are about half the gastric bypass because we're not rerouting any of the intestines."

Surgeons go through the belly button to do the surgery which allows for less pain, faster recovery and better cosmetic results. It was an attractive idea for patients like Rebecca Hammonds. She had the surgery in May.

"I've seen absolutely fantastic results. I'm so thrilled," she said. "I did not like the idea of having an implantable device inside of me so that's why I didn't go with the band."

Hammonds has already lost 70 pounds in about four months and is thrilled. But what really surprised her were the other health benefits she gained from getting the gastric sleeve procedure.

"The increased energy, how much better I feel," Hammonds said. "Before surgery I had a lot of hip pain and I'd come home from work and I could hardly walk, I was hurting so bad. And now I get home and I can deal with my children and play with them."

For the doctors, that's what makes it all worthwhile.

"People are losing, again, 60, 70, 80 percent of their excess body weight," said Dr. Yu. "But more importantly, really what we focus on is that their medical problems get better."

"I haven't been ill. I haven't been really sick," Hammonds said. "I'm losing weight and feeling great."

Dr. Yu and Dr. Terry Scarborough of Memorial Hermann are the only doctors in Houston performing the single incision gastric sleeve procedure. They are currently training other surgeons around the country how to do it.

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Laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery helps man shed obesity

St. Louis, MO
Two years ago, Herb Simmons tipped the scales at 497 pounds.

"As the years snuck up on me I noticed it was getting harder to get around," he says. "I couldn't leave home in the morning without soaking my knees in Ben Gay."

He was suffering from sleep apnea, atrial fibrillation and hypertension. Getting from his car to his house was an exhausting, stop-and-go process because he'd rest every few feet to catch his breath. He needed an extra seat belt on airplanes and a chair without arms in restaurants.

Simmons says he didn't eat big meals, but admits to snacking on chips and slurping sugary colas every day. He says he's been on every diet known to man.


"I once lost 100 pounds on OPTIFAST and regained 200," he says. "I was a yo-yo dieter."

In 2007, he attended a bariatric seminar to learn more about Lap-Band surgery, a laparoscopic procedure to place a silicone band around the top of the stomach. The band reduces the amount of food the stomach can hold so patients eat less. Simmons made an appointment with one of the surgeons, Dr. Van L. Wagner, of Heart of America Bariatrics in Lemay. He was surprised when Wagner recommended gastric bypass instead.

Gastric bypass uses staples to make the stomach smaller, then reroutes food past part of the small intestine. Patients feel full sooner, and absorb fewer calories and nutrients.

With a Lap-Band, patients lose only between 50 and 70 pounds in the first year then often taper off on weight loss, Wagner says. With gastric bypass they almost always lose between 200 and 250 pounds in two years.

"Bypass is usually a better option for patients who are sicker, older and have higher weights," Wagner says. "And Herb was extreme on several of those things so banding would not have provided the weight loss he needed."

Wagner performed laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery on Simmons Sept. 19, 2007, at St. Alexius Hospital.

Gastric bypass comes with risks, including developing gallstones and nutritional deficiencies.

Simmons takes calcium and vitamin pills and drinks protein shakes to prevent malnutrition. Two weeks after surgery, he began walking, first up and down the sidewalk in front of his house, then on a quarter-mile track. At first he couldn't walk a lap without stopping to rest several times. Within a few months, he was walking two miles. Now, he walks three to five miles every afternoon and bicycles three to five miles every evening.

He also eats a lot less, especially high-fat, sugary foods.

"It can cause dumping syndrome, which makes you want to lock yourself in a room for hours," Simmons says. WebMD describes the syndrome as a shock-like state that lasts for 30 to 60 minutes after small, easily absorbed food particles are rapidly dumped into the digestive system. Symptoms include a clammy sweat, butterflies in the stomach, a pounding pulse, cramps and diarrhea.

Simmons says his triglyceride and cholesterol levels have plummeted, his sleep apnea has dissipated and his blood pressure medications are one-fourth the dose they were before surgery. His legs no longer swell and his knees feel fine.

He credits ongoing counseling by Wagner and St. Alexius' NewStart program for his success. Both offer emotional support, nutritional guidance and ongoing education.

Last month, Simmons celebrated the second anniversary of his surgery by walking 3.7 miles as part of the Walk From Obesity event in Creve Coeur.

"After my wedding anniversary, my surgery date is the second-most important anniversary for me," Simmons says.

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Monday, October 5, 2009

Gastric bypass surgery increased risk of iron deficiency

New York, NY
Weight loss surgery can help you lose weight, but it's also likely to leave you unable to absorb iron, a new study suggests: Iron deficiency is a common problem after stomach bypass surgery to treat severe obesity -- and standard iron supplements may not be enough to prevent it in some patients.

Researchers found that among 67 Chilean women who had undergone the most common form of weight-loss surgery, 39 percent developed low blood counts, also known as anemia, within 18 months of surgery. That anemia was most often due to a deficiency in iron, which the body needs to produce healthy red blood cells that carry oxygen.

In contrast, less than two percent of the women had been anemic before surgery, the researchers report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

It's well known that nutritional deficiencies are a risk after the type of surgery examined in the trial, known as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, the most common and most effective form of weight- loss surgery for severe obesity.

The procedure involves stapling off the upper portion of the stomach to create a small pouch that restricts the amount of food a person can eat at one time. The surgeon also makes a bypass from the pouch that skirts around the rest of the stomach and a portion of the small intestine, limiting the body's absorption of nutrients.
The new findings suggest that impaired iron absorption, rather than reduced iron intake, is the major cause of long-term deficiency after gastric bypass, according to the researchers.

Tests done six months after surgery showed that, on average, women were absorbing just one-third of the iron from food that they had before surgery.

What's more, their absorption of iron from supplements showed nearly as great a decline. And many women became deficient in iron despite taking supplements after surgery, according to the researchers, led by Manuel Ruz of the University of Chile in Santiago. More "Gastric bypass surgery increased risk of iron deficiency"

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