Bariatric surgery patients lose less weight depending on their intestinal bacteria
2015-03-06
(Press-News.org) San Diego, CA-- A new study finds that after weight loss surgery, people whose breath has high concentrations of both hydrogen and methane gases have a lower percentage weight loss than other bariatric surgery patients do. The study results will be presented Thursday at the Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego.
"Our new study suggests that gastrointestinal colonization with methanogens makes it harder to lose weight after bariatric surgery," said lead investigator Ruchi Mathur, MD, director of the Diabetes Outpatient Treatment and Education Center at Cedars-Sinai, Los Angeles.
The investigators previously correlated high breath levels of both hydrogen and methane with a higher percentage of body fat and a higher body mass index (BMI), which is a measure of weight adjusted for height. Their research focused on whether there is an association between obesity or metabolic dysfunction and gut microbes that produce methane, called methanogens.
A test for the pattern of gases in exhaled breath is a surrogate for gas-producing intestinal micro-organisms, which reside in the gut, according to the researchers.
Mathur and her colleagues studied 156 obese patients (112 women and 44 men) who had undergone bariatric surgery with either gastric bypass or gastric sleeve surgery four to 12 months earlier. For equal comparison, the researchers normalized the BMI and weight change data to be at six months postoperatively for all patients. Patients were excluded from the study if they had any chronic disease, or were taking any medication, that could change gut micro-organisms.
Each patient had a single breath test. The researchers used standard cutoffs for methane of three or more parts per million (ppm) and hydrogen of 20 ppm or more to determine positive (high) test results. Thirteen patients had positive tests for both gases, according to the investigators.
These 13 patients reportedly had an average percentage decrease in BMI of only 20.6 percent compared with an average 23.5 percent BMI reduction for the other 143 patients.
Similarly, the group with high levels of methane and hydrogen had a significantly lower percentage change in weight on average: 20.0 percent of weight lost versus 23.9 percent in the other group. The difference was statistically significant and remained significant when the researchers made the cutoff 10 ppm or more for hydrogen, which is the fuel source for methane. Eighteen patients met this criterion plus having a positive methane test; they had an average 20.1 percent weight loss versus a 24 percent decrease in weight for the other group.
Mathur theorized that an overgrowth of the main methane-producing micro-organism, Methanobrevibacter smithii, may alter a person's metabolism in a way that causes that person to be more likely to gain weight or less likely to lose it. She said it is possible, however, to alter the person's mix of gut microbes through dietary changes or, in the future, use of medications currently under development.
"We believe such interventions will help these patients achieve their weight loss goals after bariatric surgery," Mathur said.
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-03-06
San Diego, CA-- The extract of onion bulb, Allium cepa, strongly lowered high blood glucose (sugar) and total cholesterol levels in diabetic rats when given with the antidiabetic drug metformin, according to a new study. The study results will be presented Thursday at The Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego.
"Onion is cheap and available and has been used as a nutritional supplement," said lead investigator Anthony Ojieh, MBBS (MD), MSc, of Delta State University in Abraka, Nigeria. "It has the potential for use in treating patients with diabetes."
To ...
2015-03-06
A new study finds that not only low but also high maternal thyroid hormone levels during early pregnancy may significantly lower the infant's IQ later in childhood. The study results, which will be presented Thursday at the Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego, suggest that the common practice of treating pregnant women who have mild thyroid hormone deficiency may pose unexpected risks to the developing baby's brain.
Doctors already know that low thyroid hormone levels in pregnant women are linked to lower child IQ scores as well as other risks to the ...
2015-03-06
San Diego, CA-- Abaloparatide-SC, an injectable drug being studied for the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis, reduces the rate of new spinal fractures by a statistically significant 86 percent and as well as statistically significant reductions in the fracture rate at other parts of the body, a phase 3 clinical trial finds. Results of the ACTIVE fracture prevention trial will be described in a late-breaking oral presentation Thursday at the Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego.
"The investigational drug abaloparatide-SC, if approved, may offer patients ...
2014-12-20
The ability of some breathalyzers widely sold to the UK public to detect potentially unsafe levels of breath alcohol for driving, varies considerably, reveals research published in the online journal BMJ Open.
The findings call into question the regulatory process for approving these sorts of devices for personal use, say the researchers, particularly as false reassurance about a person's safety to drive could have potentially catastrophic consequences.
The researchers compared the diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity) of three personal use breathalysers to detect alcohol ...
2014-12-19
Before Charlotte the spider spelled the word "humble" in her web to describe Wilbur the pig, she told Templeton the rat that the word meant "not proud."
That's probably what most people say if you put them on the spot. But if you give them time to think about it deeply, like a new study just did, other themes emerge that have a lot to do with learning.
And these intellectual dimensions of humility describe the spider as well or better than the pig.
"Wilbur has many of the dimensions of humility in general: regard for others, not thinking too highly of himself - but ...
2014-12-19
The sun emitted a mid-level flare on Dec. 18, 2014, at 4:58 p.m. EST. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the sun constantly, captured an image of the event. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. Harmful radiation from a flare cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere to physically affect humans on the ground, however -- when intense enough -- they can disturb the atmosphere in the layer where GPS and communications signals travel.
To see how this event may affect Earth, please visit NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center at http://spaceweather.gov, ...
2014-12-19
New UCLA research indicates that lost memories can be restored. The findings offer some hope for patients in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease.
For decades, most neuroscientists have believed that memories are stored at the synapses -- the connections between brain cells, or neurons -- which are destroyed by Alzheimer's disease. The new study provides evidence contradicting the idea that long-term memory is stored at synapses.
"Long-term memory is not stored at the synapse," said David Glanzman, a senior author of the study, and a UCLA professor of integrative ...
2014-12-19
Not all species may suffer from climate change. A new analysis shows that Dolly Varden, a species of char common in southeast Alaska, adjust their migrations so they can keep feasting on a key food source - salmon eggs - even as shifts in climate altered the timing of salmon spawning.
The resiliency of species to climate change may depend on how well they adapt to climate-driven changes in their food and habitat, such as altered growth of plants they feed on. A mismatch in timing between predators and the availability of prey could cause some species to lose access to ...
2014-12-19
About 15 percent of women in the United States suffer from anxiety disorders and depression during their pregnancies, and many are prescribed antidepressants. However little is known about how early exposure to these medications might affect their offspring as they mature into adults.
The answer to that question is vital, as 5 percent of all babies born in the U.S. - more than 200,000 a year - are exposed to antidepressants during gestation via transmission from their mothers.
Now, a UCLA team has studied early developmental exposure to two different antidepressants, ...
2014-12-19
HOUSTON - (Dec. 19, 2014) - An atomically thin material developed at Rice University may lead to the thinnest-ever imaging platform.
Synthetic two-dimensional materials based on metal chalcogenide compounds could be the basis for superthin devices, according to Rice researchers. One such material, molybdenum disulfide, is being widely studied for its light-detecting properties, but copper indium selenide (CIS) also shows extraordinary promise.
Sidong Lei, a graduate student in the Rice lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan, synthesized CIS, a single-layer matrix ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Bariatric surgery patients lose less weight depending on their intestinal bacteria