PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Obesity associated with increased risk of complications after surgery

Data analysis led by Robert Meguid, MD, MPH, shows that patients with overweight or obesity are at increased risk for infection, blood clots, and kidney failure after surgery

2023-05-01
(Press-News.org) In the United States, almost 74% of adults age 20 and older have overweight or obesity, and of that number almost 42% have obesity.

Not only are overweight and obesity complex and serious diseases, but clinicians and researchers are continuing to learn how they can impact health outcomes – from heart and musculoskeletal health to risk for disease, including cancer.

New research published in the journal SURGERY shows that obesity is also associated with increased risk of complications following surgery, including infection, blood clots, and kidney complications.

“We need to continue to recognize that overweight and obesity can have medical impacts that aren’t limited to heart disease and diabetes and liver failure,” says researcher Robert Meguid, MD, MPH, a professor of cardiothoracic surgery in the University of Colorado Department of Surgery. “They can also make recovery from surgery harder, and these data can inform the conversation happening at a broader public health level addressing obesity.”

Risk after surgery Using data drawn from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, Meguid and his co-researchers studied an initial data set representing more than 5.5 million patients, 44.6% of whom had obesity. They focused on nine surgical specialties, including general, thoracic, and vascular, comparing pre-operative characteristics and post-operative outcomes within body mass index (BMI) classes.

They found that compared to patients of normal weight, patients who had overweight or obesity had higher risk-adjusted odds of developing infection, kidney failure, and venous thromboembolism, or blood clots in the veins, following surgery. Patients in the obesity class III category, with a BMI of 40kg/m² or greater, also had elevated risk of unplanned hospital readmission.

“When we began the research, we did think that increased risk would be the case,” Meguid explains. “Though, we did think we might see increased risk for other post-operative complications beyond infection, kidney failure, and thromboembolism in both overweight and each class of obesity, but that wasn’t what we saw.”

A public health issue In his surgical practice, Meguid has observed that extra intra-abdominal fat tissue can lengthen the duration of surgeries and make them more complicated. The data he and his colleagues analyzed showed that surgery times on average were six minutes longer for patients with obesity.

Overweight and obesity also can be a factor in patients’ immediate recovery from surgery. “It can be more challenging for patients with overweight or obesity to be up and moving around after surgery,” Meguid says. “With lung surgery in particular, ambulating after surgery is a critical part of recovery. It can improve a patient’s spirits, it decreases risk of pneumonia, it can improve comfort and decrease the risk of blood clots forming, it can help the bowels wake up. It’s so important that patients are able to be up and walking after surgery, but it can be especially challenging when obesity is a factor.”

Because overweight and obesity are such complex topics, and is extremely personal and sensitive for the people living with them, a challenge for clinicians and researchers is initiating conversations in a way that is direct without being blaming.

“As providers, we can generally expect to broach uncomfortable and sensitive topics,” Meguid says. “We need to be straightforward in talking about the body, and we need to be honest with our patients. With overweight and obesity being so prevalent in our society, this is not an issue that’s going to be solved by one surgeon or one institution. It’s a public health issue that we need to be addressing at every level – local, state and national.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research shows that lymph node sampling during kidney tumor surgery is safe

2023-05-01
A longstanding approach to surgeries for children with kidney tumors has been an abundance of caution. While a growing body of evidence demonstrates that children who have extended lymph node sampling during surgery experience better outcomes, some have questioned whether removing more lymph nodes as part of the cancer staging is worth the risk of side effects such as lymphatic fluid leakage into the abdomen. However, recently published research shows that pediatric patients who receive more extended lymph node sampling during surgery for Wilms tumor, and other types of pediatric renal tumors, do not experience any more ...

A chronic wound model to investigate skin cellular senescence

A chronic wound model to investigate skin cellular senescence
2023-05-01
“Here, we report a chronic wound healing model that can be used to decipher the paradoxical role of cellular senescence in acute versus chronic wound healing.” BUFFALO, NY- May 1, 2023 – A new research paper was published on the cover of Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 15, Issue 8, entitled, “A chronic wound model to investigate skin cellular senescence.” Wound healing is an essential physiological process for restoring normal skin structure and ...

Researchers develop clever algorithm to improve our understanding of particle beams in accelerators

Researchers develop clever algorithm to improve our understanding of particle beams in accelerators
2023-05-01
Whenever SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory’s linear accelerator is on, packs of around a billion electrons each travel together at nearly the speed of light through metal piping. These electron bunches form the accelerator’s particle beam, which is used to study the atomic behavior of molecules, novel materials and many other subjects. But trying to estimate what a particle beam actually looks like as it travels through an accelerator is difficult, leaving scientists often with only a rough approximation of how a beam will behave during an experiment. Now, researchers at the Department of Energy’s SLAC, the DOE’s Argonne National ...

Internet search trends reflect concerns following Supreme Court health care decisions

Internet search trends reflect concerns following Supreme Court health care decisions
2023-05-01
Internet search trends may immediately capture how society seeks information related to reproductive health care, according to new research from Indiana University researchers. The study, published today in JAMA Health Forum, analyzed internet searches for abortion- and contraception-related terms following the June 24, 2022, ruling by the United States Supreme Court on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. Researchers found that searches increased much more in states where reproductive health care access was more likely to be immediately restricted following the decision. “It is still fairly early to see what will be the actual changes in reproductive ...

Having daughters might not move politicians’ votes on women’s issues to the left, after all

2023-05-01
Politicians who are the parents of daughters provide researchers with a “natural experiment” to test how personal circumstances influence legislators’ roll call votes. Research published in 2008, by author Ebonya Washington, showed that members of the U.S. House of Representatives with daughters cast more liberal votes on women’s issues during the period between 1997 and 2005. But another study published in 2019 by researchers Mia Costa et al., covering the period between 2007 and 2017, did not ...

Lee studying how to improve access to disability service information in Virginia

2023-05-01
Myeong Lee, Assistant Professor, Information Sciences and Technology, is leading a study to help people with disabilities and their families in Virginia access information about disability services more easily.  The 2022 Information Access Assessment report by the Virginia Board for People with Disabilities (VBPD) revealed that many people with disabilities and their families struggle to find the necessary information about disability services, even when they actively seek help from service agencies. ...

Herpes study adds to understanding of viral reinfections, how to potentially prevent them

Herpes study adds to understanding of viral reinfections, how to potentially prevent them
2023-05-01
A new study on herpes infections of the eye from University of Illinois Chicago researchers helps shed light on the question of viral reinfections by identifying a key protein involved in viral reinfections that could be targeted by antiviral drugs. The UIC team examined how the heparanase protein, which is present in all our cells, affects reinfection from the herpes simplex virus type 1 in mice. They found that inhibiting heparanase activity can protect the eyes from being reinfected. Mice that had their heparanase protein blocked ...

WVU announces drill date for first geothermal, carbon capture and storage data-collection well in West Virginia

WVU announces drill date for first geothermal, carbon capture and storage data-collection well in West Virginia
2023-05-01
Drilling will start on the West Virginia University geothermal and carbon capture data-collection well during the second week of May, marking a significant step forward in clean energy research in West Virginia. This will be the first-of-its-kind geothermal study in West Virginia and will collect core samples and temperature data down to a depth of 15,000 feet, critical to testing the potential of geothermal energy in the region. Data also will be gathered on the potential for underground carbon storage in the Appalachian basin — another scientific first in the state. The project is ...

Occludin protein plays key role in spread of coronavirus throughout body’s cells

Occludin protein plays key role in spread of coronavirus throughout body’s cells
2023-05-01
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- While the coronavirus continues to infect people around the world, researchers at the University of Missouri have identified a specific protein inside the human body that plays a critical role in how the virus spreads from cell to cell after infection — a discovery that will help better understand the COVID-19 disease and could lead to the development of new antiviral drugs in the future. The finding provides new insight into how the protein, known as the occludin protein, serves as a mediator for cell-to-cell transmission ...

In-person Poster Hall and Traditional Meeting Length Returning for ACR Convergence 2023

2023-05-01
ATLANTA – ACR Convergence 2023, the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and the world’s premier rheumatology experience, will be held Nov. 10 – 15 at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, CA. This year’s meeting includes the return of an in-person poster hall, five in-person networking lounges, CME for select plenary sessions, and an extra half day of scientific sessions. “We are looking forward to a great meeting this fall in beautiful San Diego! This year, we will showcase a greater number and diversity of sessions with our return to the original meeting length,” ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The dynamic core of black holes

Improving energy production by boosting singlet fission process

Smoking cessation and incident cardiovascular disease

Cannabis use during early pregnancy following recreational cannabis legalization

Research shows Cleveland Clinic’s therapeutic virtual yoga program can be effective for chronic low back pain

Closing in on Parkinson’s Disease proteins in extracellular vesicles in the blood

Regional and global experts convene in Accra, Ghana to update cancer treatment guidelines for Sub-Saharan Africa

China University of Geosciences (Beijing) unveils clues to an enigmatic geological process

Fueling greener aviation with hydrogen

Education, occupation, and wealth affect the risk of cognitive impairment

Revealing causal links in complex systems

Alzheimer disease as a clinical-biological construct— an international working group recommendation

Press registration now open for the EULAR 2025 Congress in Barcelona

New research identifies ways to protect neurons from the negative effect of high-fat diet on multiple sclerosis progression

Boosting the nutritional value of black soldier fly larvae with biotechnology

Medication decisions in pregnancy: A balancing act

Texas Tech researcher named Station Science Leader for Antarctica project

Restricting sugar consumption in utero and in early childhood significantly reduces risk of midlife chronic disease

Apixaban vs aspirin in patients with cancer and cryptogenic stroke

Can magnetic pulses aimed at the brain treat insomnia?

F.M. Kirby Research Center honors 25 years of pioneering brain imaging research

$1.75M CDC grant funds study to boost vaccine acceptance in Arizona’s rural, border communities

Immune system review provides insight into more effective biotechnology

Remote control eddies: Upwelled nutrients boost productivity around Hawaiian Islands

Rice, Texas Medical Center institutions jointly award seed grants

Sleeping for 2: Insomnia therapy reduces postpartum depression, study shows

How fruit flies achieve accurate visual behavior despite changing light conditions

First blueprint of the human spliceosome revealed

The harmful frequency and reach of unhealthy foods on social media

Autistic traits shape how we explore

[Press-News.org] Obesity associated with increased risk of complications after surgery
Data analysis led by Robert Meguid, MD, MPH, shows that patients with overweight or obesity are at increased risk for infection, blood clots, and kidney failure after surgery