Obesity Treatment Options

Once the obesity reaches a critical level (BMI>40), non-surgical methods result in poor long-term success

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Weight Loss Surgery

Information Seminar:

May 31, Thursday, 6:00 pm

Where: Courtyard Boston Woburn/Boston North Hotel.


Support Group

The next Support Group Meeting will be held on May 31, Thursday at 7:30 pm following the Information Seminar.

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2010 Top Doctors

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Boston MagazineIn the December 2010 issue of Boston Magazine Dr. Begos was recognized as a Top Doctor in colorectal surgery. The 2010 list features a total of 598 physicians selected by their peers in 55 specialties.

Diet & Behavior Modification

 

There are literally hundreds of diets available. Moving from diet to diet in a cycle of weight gain and loss - yo-yo dieting - that stresses the heart, kidneys and other organs can also be a health risk.

Doctors who prescribe and supervise diets for their patients usually create a customized program with the goal of greatly restricting calorie intake while maintaining nutrition. These diets fall into two basic categories:

  • Low Calorie Diets (LCDs) are individually planned so that the patient takes in 500 to 1,000 fewer calories a day than he or she burns.
  • Very Low Calorie Diets (VLCDs) typically limit caloric intake to 400 to 800 a day and feature high-protein, low-fat liquids.

Many patients on Very Low Calorie Diets lose significant amounts of weight. However, after returning to a normal diet, most regain the lost weight in under a year. Ninety percent of people participating in all diet programs will regain the weight they've lost within two years.

Behavior modification uses therapy to help patients change their eating and exercise habits. Like low-calorie diets, behavior modification, in most patients, results in short-term success that tends to diminish after the first year.

If diet and behavior modifications have failed you and surgery is your next option, it is important to understand that diet and behavior modification will be instrumental to sustained weight loss after your surgery. The surgery itself is only a tool to get your body started losing weight - complying with diet and behavior modifications required by most surgeons would determine your ultimate success.

Exercise

Starting an exercise program can be especially intimidating for someone suffering from morbid obesity. Your health condition may make any level of physical exertion next to impossible. The benefits of exercise are clear, however. And there are ways to get started.

 

 


A National Institutes of Health survey of 13 studies concludes that physical activity:

  • results in modest weight loss in overweight and obese individuals
  • increases cardiovascular fitness, even when there is no weight loss
  • can help maintain weight loss

New theories focusing on the body's set point (the weight range in which your body is programmed to weigh) and will fight to maintain that weight) highlight the importance of exercise. When you reduce the number of calories you take in, the body simply reacts by slowing metabolism to burn fewer calories. Daily physical activity can help speed up your metabolism, effectively bringing your set point down to a lower natural weight. So when following a diet to attempt to lose weight, exercise increases your chances of long-term success.

Examples to get you started:

  • Park at the far end of parking lots and walk
  • Take the stairs instead of the elevator
  • Cut down on television
  • Swim or participate in low-impact water aerobics
  • Ride an exercise bike

Overall, walking is one of the best forms of exercise. Start out slowly and build up. Your doctor, or people in a support group, can offer encouragement and advice. Incorporating exercise into your daily activities will improve your overall health and is important for any long-term weight management program, including weight loss surgery. Diet and exercise play a key role in successful weight loss after surgery.

Over-the-Counter & Prescription Drugs

New over-the-counter and prescription weight loss medications have been introduced. Some people have found them effective in helping to curb their appetite. The results of most studies show that patients on drug therapy lose around 10 percent of their excess weight and that the weight loss plateaus after six to eight months. As patients stop taking the medication, weight gain usually occurs.

Weight loss drugs can have serious side effects. Still, medications are an important step in the morbid obesity treatment process. Before insurance companies will reimburse/pay for weight loss surgery, you must follow a well-documented treatment path.

"Since many people cannot lose much weight no matter how hard they try, and promptly regain whatever they do lose, the vast amount of money spent on diet clubs, special foods and over-the-counter remedies, estimated to be on the order of $30 billion to $50 billion yearly, is wasted." (New England Journal of Medicine)

Surgical Methods

According to the NIH 1991 consensus statement, surgery is the only approach that provides consistent, permanent weight loss for morbidly obese patients.
In the past weight loss surgery was viewed as a dangerous and extreme technique. By today, surgery has gained acceptance as a proven method to treat this disease.

 

To have a more detailed discussion about surgical techniques, click here.