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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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 episodes of hypoxia/re-oxygenation associated with the respiratory disturbances observed in patients with obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome (OSAS) may induce the generation of oxygen free radicals. Indeed, several studies suggest that OSAS is associated with oxidative stress. The present study tested the hypothesis that patients with OSAS have an alteration in antioxidant defences. The plasma levels of total antioxidant status (TAS), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), vitamins A, E,
B12
and folate, and homocysteine were determined in 47 patients with OSAS and 37 healthy subjects. Of these, 27 patients who used continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for >4 h.night-1 were re-examined 12 months later. Patients with OSAS had lower TAS (1.4+/-0.16 versus 1.50+/-0.10 mmol.L-1), vitamin A (64+/-19 versus 74+/-17 microg.dL-1) and vitamin E levels (1,525+/-499 versus 1,774+/-503 microg.dL-1), and increased values of GGT (42+/-22 versus 32+/-16 U.L-1) than controls. There was no difference between groups in GPX, homocysteine, vitamin
B12
and folate plasma levels. CPAP treatment normalised the levels of TAS (1.50+/-0.13 mmol.L-1) and the activity of GGT (30+/-14 U.L-1) without any influence on vitamins levels. In conclusion, the results indicate that patients with obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome have a decreased antioxidant capacity that is partially reversed by continuous positive airway pressure treatment.
...
PMID:Antioxidant status in patients with sleep apnoea and impact of continuous positive airway pressure treatment. 1658 74
- Bariatric surgery is performed in patients with a body mass index (BMI) > 40kg/m2, or BMI > 35 kg/m2 with obesity-related comorbidities. The Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy are the most frequently used procedures.- On average, patients have lost 25-27% of their original weight 10 years after surgery.- Obesity-related comorbidities improve dramatically in many patients following surgery. The effect is most noticeable in patients with diabetes mellitus type 2 and obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome. - The prevalence of 30-day complications is < 5%. Mortality is < 0.2% in centres with a lot of experience. - Commonly occurring long-term complications of bariatric surgery include deficiencies, particularly of iron and vitamin
B12
, along with gallstone disease and sagging skin. - Specific complications can arise following Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, such as internal herniation and hypoglycaemia, and these are often not recognised.
...
PMID:[Bariatric surgery: who, when and where?; an overview for the referring physician]. 2874 45