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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: obesity surgery + health tips + health  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

Health Happenings
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX -
A free Bariatric Support Group, open to all weight loss surgery patients, meets at 6:30 pm the first Tuesday of each month at Arlington Memorial Hospital, ...
Learn The Facts About Gastric Bypass, Lap Band And Realize Band ...
WebWire (press release), GA -
Educational seminars give you a chance to speak one-one-one with patients who?ve undergone weight loss surgery. You?ll learn about how their health improved ...
Health & Fitness Calendar: Summer fun
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN - Aug 3, 2008
Lectures include talks from the Mid-South Transplant Foundation, pediatric obesity, health diseases in women, and SAFE prevention on sexual assault for ...
Health Beat
The Salem News, MA - Jul 31, 2008
20, 2:30 pm, Spectrum Adult Day Health Center, which is located in the Cummings Center. Registration is required; call Pamela Taylor, clinical manager, ...
Jobs' illness 'not life-threatening'
This is Money, UK - Jul 28, 2008
In 2004 Jobs underwent successful surgery to remove a rare type of pancreatic cancer. Apple has said repeatedly Jobs' health is a private matter. ...
Surviving Your PreRetirement Years: 15 Things You Must Do Between ...
PR Web (press release), WA - Jul 31, 2008
First things first: Your health. It's time to get a head-to-toe medical assessment. You can discuss it with your doctor, or you can go for a ...
Health Watch: Linking energy drinks to high-risk behavior
MetroWest Daily News, MA - Jul 27, 2008
Like surgery to treat obesity, the TOGA procedure is designed to alter a patient's anatomy to give a feeling of fullness after a small meal. ...
UK: Tackling The Health Of The Teenage Nation
Scoop.co.nz (press release), New Zealand - Jul 14, 2008
His previous Annual Reports have called for action on key public health issues such as smoke-free public places (2002 and 2003 reports), the obesity 'time ...
New direction in weight loss: Trick brain and turn appetite off
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Jul 7, 2008
Obesity has become a huge issue not only for individuals who struggle to lose weight, but also with the increased health care costs from weight-related ...
Health Events
Tampa Tribune, FL - Jul 18, 2008
POST-OPERATIVE WEIGHT LOSS: This group offers support to patients who have had weight-loss surgery. It meets from 7 to 9 pm the third Tuesday monthly. ...
Source: Google News

Childhood obesity: public-health crisis, common sense cure -
CB Ebbeling, DB Pawlak, DS Ludwig - The Lancet, 2002 - Elsevier
... decades, have examined the use of bariatric surgery for the treatment of severe
obesity in childhood. ... en-y gastric bypass?dramatic weight loss has been ...

surgery for morbid obesity: Health implications for patients, health professionals, and third-party … -
H Buchwald - Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 2005 - Elsevier
... minimal) and Class II (moderate) obesity, medical therapy ... patients who present for
bariatric surgery have already ... to achieve a sustained weight loss by using ...

Nonsurgical factors that influence the outcome of bariatric surgery: a review -
LK Hsu - Psychosomatic Medicine, 1998 - Am Psychosomatic Soc
... are usually ineffective for severe obesity and bariatric ... present a review of the
outcome of bariatric surgery in three areas: weight loss and improvement ...

Health-related quality-of-life in patients with morbid obesity after gastric banding for surgically … -
EM Mathus-Vliegen, S de Weerd, LT de Wit - Surgery, 2004 - Elsevier
... that the quality-of-life in patients with obesity is impaired. ... 5.] Older studies
already have shown that weight loss after bariatric surgery resulted in ...

BARIATRIC SURGERY Surgery for Weight Control in Patients With Morbid Obesity -
BM Balsiger, MM Murr, JL Poggio, MG Sarr - Medical Clinics of North America, 2000 - Elsevier
... Morbid obesity has become a health crisis in the ... lose (and maintain) an adequate
weight loss are largely ... Bariatric surgery has been proven to be effective at ...

Pregnancy after bariatric surgery is not associated with adverse perinatal outcome -
E Sheiner, A Levy, D Silverberg, TS Menes, I Levy, … - American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2004 - Elsevier
... Weight loss undoubtedly decreases the risk of pregnancy ... such as previous cesarean
delivery, obesity, fertility treatments ... we found that bariatric surgery was an ...

Characteristics of bariatric surgery in an integrated VA Health Care System: follow-up and outcomes -
EH Livingston, CY Liu, G Glantz, Z Li - Journal of Surgical Research, 2003 - Elsevier
... most published series of bariatric surgery outcomes contain ... health risk associated
with obesity in men ... Weight loss surgery is ideally suited for this population ...

PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS OF OBESITY AND OBESITY SURGERY -
TA Wadden, DB Sarwer, LG Womble, GD Foster, BG … - Surgical Clinics of North America, 2001 - Elsevier
... that the age of onset of obesity was a ... of changes in body-image satisfaction following
bariatric surgery. After weight loss, the body image of individuals with ...

Causes and consequences of adult obesity: health, social and economic impacts in the United States -
NS Wellman, B Friedberg - Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2002 - Blackwell Synergy
... Public Health 2001; 115: 229- 235. ... Successful weight loss following obesity
surgery and the perceived liability of morbid obesity. ...

Health Information on the Internet Accessibility, Quality, and Readability in English and Spanish -
GK Berland, MN Elliott, LS Morales, JI Algazy, RL … - JAMA, 2001 - Am Med Assoc
... content; the quality of health information; and ... childhood asthma," "depression,"
and "obesity") into each ... tamoxifen, inhaler, gastric bypass surgery, St John's ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Health Tip: Planning Obesity Surgery?

December 8, 2006 08:41:34 PM PST

(HealthDay News) -- Obesity surgery helps severely obese people lose weight by reducing the size of the stomach, by bypassing a portion of the body's digestive system, or a combination of these procedures.

But the American Obesity Association warns that the surgery does have potential risks. Here are some factors to consider on the association's list of possible complications:

  • Nausea, vomiting or abdominal pain from overeating.
  • Gastrointestinal fluids leaking into the abdominal area.
  • Restrictive bands slipping out of place or eroding.
  • Restrictive staples detaching or eroding.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Health Tip: Understanding End-Stage Renal Disease

December 8, 2006 08:41:34 PM PST

(HealthDay News) -- End-stage renal disease (ESRD), sometimes called kidney failure, occurs when kidney damage becomes so severe that the organs function at less than 10 percent of normal capacity. When this happens, the kidneys are almost completely unable to help the body excrete waste and regulate bodily fluids.

Long bouts of chronic kidney disease, most often brought on by diabetes, is the most common cause of ESRD, the U.S. National Library of Medicine says.

People with ESRD must undergo lifesaving dialysis, in which a machine performs many of the normal functions of the kidneys.

 

Infant Car Seats Might Pose Breathing Risks

December 8, 2006 08:41:34 PM PST
By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, Dec. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Babies should not be left alone to sleep in car safety seats, especially if they were born prematurely, New Zealand pediatricians report.

Their warning, published in this week's issue of the British Medical Journal, is based on a study of nine infants, aged 3 days to 6 months, who were referred to the Auckland Cot Monitoring Service by parents alarmed by what they described as infants who were "blue," "scrunched up" or "not breathing."

"All but one case occurred when the infants had been left in the car seats indoors, allowing them to fall asleep unrestrained in an upright position," said a report by the group, led by Dr. Alistair J. Gunn, an associate professor of physiology and pediatrics at the University of Auckland.

All the infants survived, but the parents were given advice on better positioning to prevent future problems, and warnings about not leaving the babies in the car seats for excessive periods of time.

It's a "fairly important paper," said Dr. Christopher Greeley, medical director of the newborn nursery at Vanderbilt Children's Hospital in Nashville, because it demonstrates the potential dangers of car seats, which are regarded as essential for protecting children if accidents occur.

"The take-home message is that parents should not leave babies unattended in car seats," Greeley said. "If you leave a very young baby in a car seat, the structure of the head, bigger in the back, can cause the airway, the trachea, to be narrowed."

Vanderbilt follows the recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics -- that all babies born before 37 weeks of pregnancy get a car seat test before they leave the hospital, he said.

"They get the test for the potentially longest duration of the ride home, so that they don't have this kind of positional occlusion," Greeley said. "The test is done for premature babies or full-term babies who have issues with their airways. If they are born really small, have poor nutrition or have poor neck control, we do the test."

When the children do get home, leaving them in car seats for a prolonged period is not a good idea, Greeley said. "The more they are left in, the more predisposed they are to have partial blockage of the airways," he noted. "Sleeping in a car seat is not necessarily a cause of death, but there is a higher likelihood that a baby somewhere will have difficulty with breathing."

"Car seats should only be used for transportation purposes," said Linda White, injury prevention coordinator at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. "Bringing one into the house and leaving a child in it, that is not what they are intended for."

Parents sometimes bring a car seat into the house and leave a baby in it "because they don't want to disturb them," White said. "But you don't want them [the babies] to be at that extended angle for a long period of time. We encourage families even when they are traveling to stop often and take the baby out of the car seat. The extended period of time is the key."

Marjorie Marciano, director of the safety education office at the New York City Department of Transportation, offers this advice: "We do know that using a car seat that is installed correctly can reduce the risk of injury significantly, for example by 70 percent for children under 1 year old," she said. "Installed correctly means that it should be at an angle of 45 degrees. When working with parents, we always say that it is important that the seat be at the right angle to keep the airway open."

More information

A parent's guide to car safety seats is provided by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

 
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