|

Home
About Diabetes
Complications
Warning Signs
Screening Test
Donate Now
E-Lerts™
Index
Latest News
Diabetes Terms
Health & Fitness
Online Press Center
Meet Mr. Diabetes®
Wake Up And Walk®
Tour
Headlines & Stories
About Us - Contact
Info
Message Board
Links
| |
Weight Loss Surgery
Staves Off Prediabetes
posted January 20, 2005
Normal insulin sensitivity is
restored more rapidly and is not dependent on the amount of weight loss.
Obese patients typically show poor sensitivity to the hormone insulin, a
problem that can lead to diabetes. Previous reports have shown that weight loss
surgery can improve this sensitivity and now, new research indicates that the
type of surgery determines how fast this problem is fixed.
Restrictive weight loss surgery, such as gastric bypass, involves limiting the
stomach size, ultimately causes the patient to eat less. In contrast, with
malabsorptive operations, such as biliopancreatic diversion, the intestines are
rearranged in such a way that the patient absorbs less of what is eaten.
The new findings indicate that with restrictive operations, the improvement in
insulin sensitivity depends on the degree of weight loss. With malabsorptive
operations, however, normal insulin sensitivity is restored more rapidly and is
not dependent on the amount of weight loss.
The findings, are based on a study of 18 patients with severe obesity and 20
lean comparison subjects who underwent insulin sensitivity testing. The obese
patients were treated with either gastric bypass or biliopancreatic diversion
and then reevaluated 5 to 6 months and 16 to 24 months postoperatively.
With each procedure, weight loss averaged more than 100 pounds and occurred over
roughly the same time course. However, as noted, the operations differed in
their effects on insulin sensitivity.
During follow-up, a steady improvement in insulin sensitivity was seen in the
gastric bypass group, but even at 16 months the sensitivity scores were still
much lower than those of lean subjects.
In the biliopancreatic diversion group, by contrast, insulin sensitivity
normalized by 6 months and actually exceeded that of lean subjects at 24-month
follow-up, even though the subjects were still obese.
While the results suggest that biliopancreatic diversion restores insulin
sensitivity more rapidly than gastric bypass, the authors note that each
procedure has pros and cons and that doctors should decide which to use for a
particular patient on an individual basis.
Source: Diabetes In Control.com:
American Journal of Medicine, January 2005.
January 2005 News Article Index
|