Background: We analyzed the role of high plasma ghrelin concentrations at surgery as a negative predictor of weight loss in morbidly obese patients treated with laparoscopic gastric banding (LAGB).

Methods: Fasting plasma ghrelin concentrations were measured in 113 women before LAGB, and 16 of them were identified as having ghrelin concentrations clearly higher than expected according to the BMI levels. The 2-year postoperative outcome of these 16 patients was compared to the outcome of the remaining subjects.

Results: Mean fasting plasma ghrelin concentration in the group with hyperghrelinemia was 82.3+/-23.1 pg/ml and in women with normal ghrelin was 27.1+/-11.3 pg/ml (P<0.001). No differences in age, age at onset of obesity or degree of obesity were observed between the two groups. Women with hyperghrelinemia had a weight gain during the waiting time similar to women with normal ghrelin. The prevalence of comorbidities and eating behavior disturbances was similar in the two groups, but depression was 2.5 fold more prevalent in the hyperghrelinemic women than in the women with normal ghrelin. The %EWL after LAGB surgery was similar in women with high and normal ghrelin concentrations, with no differences in levels of postoperative band filling. No differences in band-related complications or revisional surgery rate were observed between the two groups.

Conclusion: A high fasting ghrelin concentration at baseline did not significantly affect the outcome after LAGB in morbidly obese women, in terms of weight loss and complications rate.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1381/096089206778026307DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plasma ghrelin
12
ghrelin concentrations
12
ghrelin concentration
8
predictor weight
8
weight loss
8
loss morbidly
8
morbidly obese
8
treated laparoscopic
8
gastric banding
8
fasting plasma
8

Similar Publications

Satiety-enhancing placebo intervention decreases selective attention to food cues.

Front Psychiatry

December 2024

Institute of Medical Psychology, Faculty of Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Munich, Germany.

Background: As placebo interventions could influence appetite and satiety in first studies, they are a promising tool for the future treatment of obesity. Furthermore, individuals with heightened body weight show increased selective attention for food cues. This study aimed to investigate whether placebo induced changes of appetite and satiety can affect attention allocation and to examine correlating factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, the relationship between plasma ghrelin levels and muscle atrophy was examined in an experimental diabetic rat model. 56 male Wistar albino rats, aged 8-10 weeks, were used in the study. The rats were divided into 8 groupsD1: one-week diabetes, C1: one-week control, D2: three-week diabetes, C2: three-week control, D3: six-week diabetes, C3: six-week control, D4: eight-week diabetes, C4: eight-week control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Bariatric surgery is very effective in long-term weight management. The present study was undertaken to investigate the short-term effects of sleeve gastrectomy (SG) and of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) on (a) gastrointestinal (GI) motility, that is gastric emptying and oro-cecal transit time and (b) secretion of regulatory gut peptides and (c) their interrelationship.

Methods: Prospective single-centre study in which we assessed gastric emptying, oro-cecal transit time and gut peptide release in 28 severely obese individuals before and 2, respectively, 12 months after bariatric surgery (either SG or RYGB).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The endocrine consequences of weight loss by bariatric surgery (BS) and caloric restriction are not fully understood but contribute to variable improvements in insulin sensitivity and cardiometabolic health. This study compared changes in insulin sensitivity and plasma concentrations of gut peptides 8 weeks and 1 year after BS and a low-calorie diet (LCD). Nineteen female patients with obesity self-selected BS (gastric bypass [n = 5] or sleeve gastrectomy [n = 7]) or LCD (n = 7) in this parallel-arm, prospective observational study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Satiety Hormone LEAP2 After Low-Calorie Diet With/Without Endobarrier Insertion in Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

J Endocr Soc

November 2024

PsychoNeuroEndocrinology Research Group, Division of Psychiatry, Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Hospital, London W12 0NN, UK.

Context: The liver/foregut satiety hormone liver-expressed antimicrobial peptide 2 (LEAP2) is an inverse agonist at the acyl ghrelin receptor (GHSR), increasing after food intake and decreasing after bariatric surgery and short-term nonsurgical weight loss, but effects of long-term dietary weight loss are unknown.

Objective: The objective of this study was to examine and compare the effects of these interventions on fasting and postprandial plasma LEAP2 and investigate potential metabolic mediators of changes in plasma LEAP2.

Methods: Plasma LEAP2 was measured in a previously published 2-year trial comparing standard medical management (SMM) (including 600-kcal/day deficit) with duodenal-jejunal bypass liner (DJBL, Endobarrier) insertion (explanted after 1 year) in adults with obesity and inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!