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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Morbid obesity
causes co-morbidity such as diabetes mellitus, hypertensive heart disease,
sleep apnoea
, degenerative bone diseases and increased incidence of malignancy. Life expectancy and quality of life are reduced significantly. Without adequate weight loss, treatment of co-morbidity remains symptomatic only. Surgical treatment of
morbid obesity
is the one therapy promising long-term success, since conservative procedures normally lead to recurrence of overweight. We performed laparoscopic gastric banding on 130 patients between 1.11.95 and 31.10.97. Mean overweight was 63 +/- 12.7 kg (SD), and mean BMI was 46.5 +/- 4.6 kg/m2. The average hospital stay was 5.5 +/- 1.5 days. 4 patients with postoperative pulmonary embolism were treated with oral anticoagulation. We performed 9 (6.9%) reoperations because of pouch dilatation or dorsal slipping with food intolerance in the first series of 70, and none in the second series of 60 patients. Median weight loss after 3 months was 14.7 +/- 4.2 kg, after six months 24.0 +/- 6.6 kg and after 12 months 33.2 +/- 8.5 kg, corresponding to excessive weight loss (EWL) of 55.9 +/- 14.8% in the first year. 14 (70%) of 20 patients with diabetes mellitus normalised and 6 patients with diabetes mellitus normalised and 6 patients showed improved blood sugar levels. All 36 patients with hypertensive heart disease had normalised blood pressure, 60% of them without further medical antihypertensive treatment after median EWL of 36%. Cholesterol levels normalised in 30 (57%) patients and improved in 20 (38%) after 6 months. Laparoscopic gastric banding is a suitable method for reducing weight in
morbid obesity
patients and provides a better quality of life in a group of patients who are carefully evaluated and followed. Reducing co-morbidity and improving ability to work have a positive economic impact on health care costs.
...
PMID:[Morbid obesity: 130 consecutive patients with laparoscopic gastric banding]. 975 89
Obesity is an increasing health problem in most developed countries and its prevalence is also increasing in developing countries. There has been no great success with dietary means and life style modification for permanent weight loss. Various surgical treatment methods for obesity are now available. They are aimed at limiting oral energy intake with or without causing dumping or inducing selective maldigestion and malabsorption. Based on current literature, up to 75% of excess weight is lost by surgical treatment with concomitant disappearance of hyperlipidaemias, type 2 diabetes, hypertension or
sleep apnoea
. The main indication for operative treatment is
morbid obesity
(body mass index greater than 40 kg/m2) or severe obesity (body mass index > 35 kg/m2) with comorbidities of obesity. Orlistat is a new inhibitor of pancreatic lipase enzyme. At doses of 120 mg three times per day with meals it results in a 30% reduction in dietary fat absorption, which equals approximately 200 kcal daily energy deficit. In the long term, orlistat has been shown to be more effective than placebo in reducing body weight and serum total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Orlistat has a lowering effect on serum cholesterol independent of weight loss. Along with weight loss, orlistat also favourably affects blood pressure and glucose and insulin levels in obese individuals and in obese type 2 diabetic patients.
...
PMID:New aspects in the management of obesity: operation and the impact of lipase inhibitors. 1009 83
BACKGROUND: Respiratory insufficiency associated with
morbid obesity
can include
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
), obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS), or a combination of both. The aim of our study was to determine the safety and effectiveness of vertical banded gastroplasty (VBG) in the treatment of severely obese patients with respiratory insufficiency. METHODS: From 1983 to 1994, 35 patients (25 males, ten females) who met the criteria for either
SAS
and OHS (1 9 patients) or
SAS
alone (1 6 patients) underwent VBG. RESULTS: Six patients (17%) died of subsequent pulmonary-cardiac disease despite significant weight loss. Need for nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) decreased after VBG from 68% of patients preoperatively to 22% postoperatively. Of the ten patients with sleep studies, the apnea/hyponea index decreased from 45 +/- 11 events per h preoperatively to 12 +/- 6 events per h postoperatively, while per cent ideal body weight (%IBW) also decreased (pre-VBG: 268 +/- 12, post-VBG: 204 +/- 12). Of the seven patients with arterial blood gases, PaCO&inf2; decreased from 55 +/- 4 torr preoperatively to 41 +/- 3 torr postoperatively, and PaO&inf2; increased from 50 +/- 4 torr preoperatively to 73 +/- 6 torr postoperatively, while %IBW decreased (pre-VBG: 263 +/- 16, post-VBG: 193 +/- 14). CONCLUSION: Respiratory insufficiency is a life-threatening complication of
morbid obesity
. In morbidly obese patients with respiratory insufficiency, VBG offers improvement in both
SAS
and OHS. Respiratory insufficiency due to obesity should be considered a strong indication for VBG.
...
PMID:Impact of Vertical Banded Gastroplasty on Respiratory Insufficiency of Severe Obesity. 1072 91
We report a case of
morbid obesity
accompanied by obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (
SAS
) and obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS). Satisfactory weight control was obtained without significant surgical complications after vertical banded gastroplasty. With the reduction in weight, the symptoms of
SAS
and OHS, as well as several other complications caused by the severe obesity, disappeared. Quality of life also improved remarkably, as exhibited by improved activity performance and disappearance of irritability at waking. Thus, it appears that vertical banded gastroplasty is efficacious in the treatment of
morbid obesity
with
sleep apnea
and hypoventilation.
...
PMID:Vertical Banded Gastroplasty for Sleep Apnea Syndrome Associated with Morbid Obesity. 1076 86
The definition and the outline of historical background of
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
) was given. The clinical issues related to daytime hypersomnolence and
morbid obesity
in
SAS
patients were also focused from the viewpoints of their cardiovascular complications and mortality. The difference of
SAS
was also compared and discussed between Caucasian and Japanese.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea syndrome and its mortality]. 1094 15
The incidence of obesity (especially childhood obesity) and its associated health-related problems have reached epidemic proportions in the United States. Recent investigations suggest that the causes of obesity involve a complex interplay of genetic, environmental, psychobehavioral, endocrine, metabolic, cultural, and socioeconomic factors. Several genes and their protein products, such as leptin, may be particularly important in appetite and metabolic control, although the genetics of human obesity appear to involve multiple genes and metabolic pathways that require further elucidation.
Severe obesity
is frequently associated with significant comorbid medical conditions, including coronary artery disease, hypertension, type II diabetes mellitus, gallstones, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, pulmonary hypertension, and
sleep apnea
. Long-term reduction of significant excess weight in these patients may improve or resolve many of these obesity-related health problems, although convincing evidence of long-term benefit is lacking. Available treatments of obesity range from diet, exercise, behavioral modification, and pharmacotherapy to surgery, with varying risks and efficacy. Nonsurgical modalities, although less invasive, achieve only relatively short-term and limited weight loss in most patients. Currently, surgical therapy is the most effective modality in terms of extent and duration of weight reduction in selected patients with acceptable operative risks. The most widely performed surgical procedure, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, achieves permanent (followed up for more than 14 years) and significant weight loss (more than 50% of excess body weight) in more than 90% of patients.
...
PMID:Current status of medical and surgical therapy for obesity. 1117 43
Severe obesity
is associated with multiple comorbidities and is refractory to dietary management with or without behavioral or drug therapies. There are a number of surgical procedures for the treatment of
morbid obesity
, including purely gastric restrictive, a combination of malabsorption and gastric restriction or primary malabsorption. The purely gastric restrictive procedures, including vertical banded gastroplasty and laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding, do not provide adequate weight loss. African-American patients do especially poorly after the banding procedure with the loss of only 11% of excess weight in one study. Gastric bypass (GBP) is associated with the loss of 66% of excess weight at 1 to 2 years after surgery, 60% at 5 years and 50% at 10 years. For unknown reasons, African-American patients lose significantly less weight than Caucasians after GBP. There is a risk of micronutrient deficiencies after GBP, including iron deficiency anemia in menstruating women, vitamin B12, and calcium deficiencies. Prophylactic supplementation of these nutrients is necessary. Recurrent vomiting after bariatric surgery may be associated with a severe polyneuropathy and must be aggressively treated with endoscopic dilatation before this complication is allowed to develop. The malabsorptive procedures include the partial biliopancreatic bypass (BPD) and BPD with duodenal switch (BPD/DS). The BPD appears to cause severe protein-calorie malnutrition in American patients; the BPD/DS may be associated with less malnutrition. Weight loss failure after GBP does not respond to tightening a dilated gastrojejunal stoma or reducing the size of the gastric pouch. These patients may require conversion to a malabsorptive distal GBP, similar to the BPD. However, because of the risk of severe protein-calorie malnutrition and calcium deficiency BPD should be reserved for patients with severe obesity comorbidity. The risk of death following bariatric surgery is between 1% and 2% in most series but is significantly higher in patients with respiratory insufficiency of obesity. In most patients, surgically induced weight loss will correct hypertension, type II diabetes mellitus,
sleep apnea
, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, venous stasis disease, urinary incontinence, female sexual hormone dysfunction, pseudotumor cerebri, degenerative joint disease pains, as well as improved self-image and employability.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery for severe obesity. 1185 Dec 1
The diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome rests on the demonstration of clinical features and biochemical abnormalities that reflect hypercortisolism. If a patient presents with typical clinical features such as weight gain with truncal obesity and supraclavicular fat deposition, wide purple striae, and proximal muscle weakness, the diagnosis is clear-cut and is nearly always substantiated by a 24-hour urine free cortisol excretion value more than four times the normal level. However, many patients present with signs and symptoms that are common in the general population, such as hypertension, generalized weight gain, reproductive abnormalities, and depression. Many of these patients have normal cortisol excretion and do not have Cushing's syndrome. Others have mild hypercortisolism caused by psychiatric disorders, obligate exercise,
morbid obesity
,
sleep apnea
, or uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. These patients may be confused with those with the true Cushing's syndrome, and thus are considered to have a "pseudo-Cushing" state. Additional observation over time, and testing with midnight cortisol measurements, the 2-day-2-mg dexamethasone suppression test, or the dexamethasone suppression-CRH stimulation test may be useful to identify true Cushing's syndrome in these patients.
...
PMID:Diagnostic tests for Cushing's syndrome. 1238 46
In patients with obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome (OSAS), pulmonary haemodynamics can show both transient perturbations during sleep and permanent alterations. During sleep, repeated fluctuations in pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary wedge pressure, coincident with apnoeas, can be observed. Calculation of transmural pressure values is preferable to intravascular pressures in OSAS, due to the marked swings in intrathoracic pressure associated with obstructive apnoeas. Pulmonary artery pressure may progressively increase during sleep, particularly in close sequences of highly desaturating apnoeas. Apnoea-induced hypoxia appears as the most important determinant of this pulmonary artery pressure behaviour. Stroke volume and cardiac output during obstructive apnoeas show changes mainly related to intrathoracic pressure variations. Permanent precapillary pulmonary hypertension at rest is observed in <50% OSAS patients, and is poorly reversible after OSAS treatment. It correlates best with diurnal respiratory function parameters. However, the finding of pulmonary hypertension in some patients with near normal diurnal lung function led to suggest that sleep respiratory disorders may contribute to permanent pulmonary haemodynamic impairment in predisposed subjects. Knowledge on right ventricle hypertrophy in OSAS is inconsistent. As to right ventricle failure, it is clinically evident in subjects with associated lung disease or
morbid obesity
, while it may be detected instrumentally in subjects without such alterations, presumably as effect of apnoeas themselves. Besides, it appears more fully reversible after long-term OSAS treatment than pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Pulmonary haemodynamics in obstructive sleep apnoea. 1253 Nov 20
A 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference concluded that severely obese adults could be eligible for bariatric surgery if they had a body mass index (BMI) > or =35 kg/m(2) with or > or =40 kg/m(2) without obesity comorbidity. It was thought at that time that there were inadequate data to support bariatric surgery in severely obese adolescents. An estimated 25% of children in the United States are obese, a number that has doubled over a 30-year period. Very little information has been published on the subject of obesity surgery in adolescents. Therefore we reviewed our 20-year database on bariatric surgery in adolescents. Severely obese adolescents, ranging from 12 to less than 18 years of age, were considered eligible for bariatric surgery according to the National Institutes of Health adult criteria. Gastroplasty was the procedure of choice in the initial 3 years of the study followed by gastric bypass, which was found to be significantly more effective for weight loss in adults. Distal gastric bypass (D-GBP) was used in extremely obese patients (BMI > or =60 kg/m(2)) before 1992 and long-limb gastric bypass (LL-GBP) was used for superobese patients (BMI > or =50 kg/m(2)) after 1992. Laparoscopic gastric bypass was used after 2000. Thirty-three adolescents (27 white, 6 black; 19 females, 14 males) underwent the following bariatric operations between 1981 and June 2001: horizontal gastroplasty in one, vertical banded gastroplasty in two, standard gastric bypass in 17 (2 laparoscopic), LL-GBP in 10, and D-GBP in three. Mean BMI was 52 +/- 11 kg/m(2) (range 38 to 91 kg/m(2)), and mean age was 16 +/- 1 years (range 12.4 to 17.9 years). Preoperative comorbid conditions included the following: type II diabetes mellitus in two patients, hypertension in 11, pseudotumor cerebri in three, gastroesophageal reflux in five,
sleep apnea
in six, urinary incontinence in two, polycystic ovary syndrome in one, asthma in one, and degenerative joint disease in 11. There were no operative deaths or anastomotic leaks. Early complications included pulmonary embolism in one patient, major wound infection in one, minor wound infections in four, stomal stenoses (endoscopically dilated) in three, and marginal ulcers (medically treated) in four. Late complications included small bowel obstruction in one and incisional hernias in six patients. There were two late sudden deaths (2 years and 6 years postoperatively), but these were unlikely to have been caused by the bariatric surgical procedure. Revision procedures included one D-GBP to gastric bypass for malnutrition and one gastric bypass to LL-GBP for inadequate weight loss. Regain of most or all of the lost weight was seen in five patients at 5 to 10 years after surgery; however, significant weight loss was maintained in the remaining patients for up to 14 years after surgery. Comorbid conditions resolved at 1 year with the exception of hypertension in two patients, gastroesophageal reflux in two, and degenerative joint disease in seven. Self-image was greatly enhanced; eight patients have married and have children, five patients have completed college, and one patient is currently in college.
Severe obesity
is increasing rapidly in adolescents and is associated with significant comorbidity and social stigmatization. Bariatric surgery in adolescents is safe and is associated with significant weight loss, correction of obesity comorbidity, and improved self-image and socialization. These data strongly support obesity surgery for those unfortunate individuals who may have difficulty obtaining insurance coverage based on the 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference statement.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery for severely obese adolescents. 1255 91
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