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Old 04-20-2008, 10:02 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Default Gastric Bypass surgery solves Type II Diabetes? How bout IR?

I was watching the news today and they said they have discovered that people who have had GP surgery no longer need diabetes meds and that it goes into complete remission. This remission was even prior to weight loss. Their studies show that it has something to do with the small intestine being bypassed . . . when they bypassed rat s intestines it was put in remission and then when reattached it reoccurred. The NIH is now trying to change qualifications for GP for diabetics as well as obesity . . . I wonder if IR should be included? So my question is in two parts:

1.) if you have had GP surgery did your diabetes disappear?

2.) if you have IR and had GP surgery did it disappear?
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Old 04-22-2008, 11:26 AM   #2 (permalink)
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My friend's mother had GBS, and it was for her diabetes, too. I was confused when he told me that, because I thought it came from the weight loss.

My father controlled his diabetes by losing weight -- he lost 60 pounds and avoided having to take medication for it. He does still test his blood sugar, because he needs to know how he's doing, but if he happens to eat a meal that raises it, he goes off to exercise and "walk it" off the excess insulin he's produced.

I'd love to hear about this too, if it is related to the surgery, rather than the weight loss. I know of someone else who wants to do lap-band to improve her IR. I don't know if the same would apply to her.
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Old 04-22-2008, 11:43 AM   #3 (permalink)
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This is the search link to watch reports from 60 minutes on this subject, tell me what you think

http://search.cbsnews.com/?source=cb...urgery&x=0&y=0
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Old 06-20-2008, 10:54 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mrsllrobertson View Post
I wonder if IR should be included? So my question is in two parts:

2.) if you have IR and had GP surgery did it disappear?
Scroll down and see section in RED/BOLD:

Weight loss after gastric bypass controls diabetes
By Karla Gale
Fri Jun 20, 2:38 PM ET


Obesity surgery can cause type 2 diabetes to go into remission, but much depends on how much weight the patient loses within the first few months, a new study suggests.

Gastric bypass surgery for severe obesity has been shown to control type 2 diabetes, a disorder that commonly goes hand-in-hand with obesity. The procedure involves sectioning off a small portion of the stomach, creating a pouch that limits the amount of food a person can eat in one sitting.

The surgeon also adds a bypass that reroutes food past the rest of the stomach and part of the small intestine to limit calorie and nutrient absorption.

It's thought that the surgery creates hormonal changes that, in turn, improve diabetes control.

However, the new study, by surgeons at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, shows that hormones are not the whole story. The amount of weight patients shed in the first six months after surgery appears key to diabetes remission.

"Gastric bypass surgery appears to cause important metabolic effects that rapidly improve type 2 diabetes, but weight loss itself is also extremely important," Dr. Eric DeMaria said in an interview with Reuters Health.

DeMaria presented his group's research this week at the annual meeting of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery in Washington, DC.

He and his team followed 71 morbidly obese patients with severe diabetes requiring high doses of insulin and oral medications to control their blood sugar levels. The researchers' goal was to identify factors that differentiate patients who go into remission from those who do not.

"We found that the most important factor was the amount of weight loss by the patient," DeMaria said.

Diabetes control was improved in all patients as evidenced by better long-term blood sugar levels and reductions in the amount of medication they needed. Still, only 48 percent went into complete remission.

The researchers found that weight loss in the first three weeks to six months after surgery was a critical factor in diabetes remission.

The hormonal effects of gastric bypass surgery are still important.

"Morbidly obese patients usually lose about 10 percent of their body weight within three weeks of surgery," DeMaria said, "but that does not explain why they can cut back on their medications within the first day or two."

That benefit, he explained, "appears to be an effect on gut hormones, with dramatic improvement in insulin resistance."

"But," DeMaria added, "it is interesting to recognize that faster weight loss and greater amount lost improves the chance that patients will remain in remission."

The findings, he said, suggest that "if we can enhance the weight-loss effect of surgery -- by adding medications or rigorous behavior modification -- we may do better than a 50 percent remission rate."

Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited.
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