Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California


Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: surgery + bariatric + health  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 218 for surgery bariatric health. (0.11 seconds) 
Recent
Archives
  • All dates
  • 2007
  • 2006
  • 2005
  • 2004
  • 2003

 Sorted by relevance   Sort by date   Sort by date with duplicates included 
Learn more about weight-loss surgery at Saturday seminar
El Paso Times, TX -
Las Palmas Medical Center will host informational weight-loss seminars provided by the Las Palmas Bariatric Center at 10 am Saturday in Classroom A of Las ...
Pregnant Women After Bariatric Surgery Show Fewer Complications
Medical News Today, UK -
Bariatric surgery, sometimes known as weight loss surgery, can help obese people achieve a healthier body weight. The authors of the study note the ...

TheMedGuru
Weight-loss surgery bodes well for pregnancy
Los Angeles Times, CA - Nov 19, 2008
Women in their child-bearing years have increasingly turned to bariatric surgery to lose weight, but without much information on how such surgical ...
Go for pre-pregnancy weight loss surgery Times of India
Risk Of Maternal And Newborn Complications May Be Lower After ... Science Daily (press release)
Some Pregnancy-Related Complications Minimized for Women Who Have ... MarketWatch
Current World News - eFluxMedia
all 58 news articles »
Physical Activity After Bariatric Surgery Improves Weight Loss ...
Science Daily (press release) - Nov 17, 2008
When researchers looked at health-related quality of life, they discovered that individuals who became active following bariatric surgery, as well as those ...
Weight-loss surgery may improve IVF outcomes
Reuters - Nov 11, 2008
By Karla Gale NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Preliminary findings from patients who underwent obesity surgery, also known as bariatric surgery, at Washington ...
UPDATE 1-US Medicare wants limits for weight loss surgery
Reuters - Nov 17, 2008
"While recent medical reports claimed that bariatric surgery may be helpful for these patients, CMS (the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) did not ...
Medicare Wants to Cut Funding for Weight Loss Surgeries The ... Softpedia
all 17 news articles »
Medicare Likely to Drop Coverage of Surgery for Combating Diabetes
Workforce Management, Ca - Nov 18, 2008
?While recent medical reports claimed that bariatric surgery may be helpful for these patients, Medicare did not find convincing medical evidence that ...
CMS may not cover bariatric surgery for non-obese diabetics
McKnight's Long Term Care News, NY - Nov 24, 2008
While recent studies have found that bariatric surgery may be helpful for diabetics, CMS did not find evidence that bariatric surgery improved health ...
Healthplace America Delivers the First and Only Surgery Benefit ...
MarketWatch - Nov 20, 2008
In addition, costs are increasing faster for surgery than for many other managed health benefits, such as pharmacy benefits.+ "While a range of products and ...
Weight Loss Surgery Helps Obese Women Have Healthier Babies
New York Times, United States - Nov 19, 2008
The review of 75 studies found that pregnant women who lose weight after bariatric surgery may have lower rates of complications like gestational diabetes ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: health + heart + raises  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Start! Heart Walk to raise awareness, funds
KPCnews.com, IN -
Heart Walk creates opportunities for people to improve their health by walking and simultaneously raise funds to help fight heart disease and stroke. ...
Cheri Daniels hosting Heartland Walk for Health
Indianapolis Star, United States - Aug 4, 2008
The Heartland Walk for Health strives to raise awareness that heart disease is the leading cause of death for women and to promote heart-healthy lifestyles ...

Oneindia
Flu Vaccine May Not Protect Elderly
Oneindia, India -
And they didn't review medical records to get information on chronic diseases, such as heart or lung disease, which raise the risk of pneumonia. ...
4-H Heart, head, hands and health may have to add another H ...
Belleville News Democrat,  USA -
Members still include rural children who grow crops and raise livestock, but most are city kids involved in everything from art to journalism, geography to ...BOM:504176
Study finds immigrant kids get less exercise
Reuters India, India - Aug 4, 2008
... indicate this group may be at higher risk for obesity and the various health complications it entails. Obesity raises a person's risk of heart disease, ...
Democratic leaders need constitutional jolt
Chicago Tribune, United States -
His office denies that the delay of the Senate vote has anything to do with pay raises, but the excuse that is offered?that the Senate already has passed ...

Irish Independent
Why our food rules should be taken with a pinch of salt
Irish Independent, Ireland -
"Bad saturated fats of animal origin (butter, cheese, meat) are what raise cholesterol." Janis Morrissey of the Irish Heart Foundation adds: "Eggs are ...
Ethics of Studies in Poor Countries Lead to Call for New Regulations
New York Times, United States -
By DONALD G. MCNEIL Jr. Even something as apparently innocuous as health surveys can raise tricky moral questions when conducted in poor countries, ...
Craig W. Philips Takes Helm at CTI
FOXBusiness -
However, they may cause cumulative heart damage that limits lifetime dosage and does not allow for retreatment. Pixantrone has been designed to reduce the ...CTIC - OTC:CMTX
Lagan's high health & safety standards
Contract Journal, UK -
On all our sites we operate a 'safety first' culture that aims to raise safety awareness in everything we do. "At the outset of each site set-up, ...
Source: Google News

… Therapy, and Incident Coronary Heart Disease Prospective Analysis From the Women's Health -
AD Pradhan, JAE Manson, JE Rossouw, DS Siscovick, … - JAMA, 2002 - Am Med Assoc
... levels, 1-3 an observation that raises the possibility of ... and HL 07575 from the National
Heart, Lung, and ... with the National Institutes of Health, Department of ...

… American Adults A Statement for Health Professionals From the Nutrition Committee, American Heart -
RM Krauss, RJ Deckelbaum, N Ernst, E Fisher, BV … - Circulation, 1996 - Am Heart Assoc
... to increase cardiovascular risk or raise blood pressure in ... Diet and coronary heart
disease: a statement for physicians and other health professionals. ...

Coronary heart disease in seven countries
A Keys - Nutrition, 1997 - Elsevier
... that saturated fatty acids raise plasma cholesterol ... dietary intake matched currently
understood health criteria ... growing epidemic of coronary heart disease might ...

… patients with and without pre-existing coronary heart disease: life table method applied to health -
PD Pharoah, W Hollingworth - BMJ, 1996 - Mass Med Soc
... the expense of therapy raises questions about ... and without pre- existing coronary
heart disease: life table method applied to health authority population. ...

Exercise in the prevention of coronary heart disease: today's best buy in public health. -
JN MORRIS - Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1994 - acsm-msse.org
... the big majority may be pre- sumed at raised risk because ... the USA, with their high
rate of heart disease and ... is time for joint ex- periment by health and social ...

… for Heart Transplantation A Statement for Health Professionals From the Committee on Heart Failure … -
MR Costanzo, S Augustine, R Bourge, M Bristow, JB … - Circulation, 1995 - Am Heart Assoc
... A Statement for Health Professionals From the Committee on ... 47 This apparent paradox
raises the question of ... mortality and for which heart transplantation should ...

… in Cardiovascular Disease Enterprises Part II: The Aging Heart in Health: Links to Heart Disease -
EG Lakatta, D Levy - Circulation, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
... with age, and this process raises systolic blood ... Importance of heart failure with
preserved systolic function in ... CHS Research Group Cardiovascular Health Study ...

… cardiovascular disease in clinical practice. Absolute risk rules-but raises the question of … -
R Jackson - BMJ, 2000 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Absolute risk rules?but raises the question of population ... table in the 1995 Scottish
health survey population ... the Framingham model to predict heart disease in ...

Alcohol and coronary heart disease: the evidence for a protective effect -
W B. 6Kannel, R Curtis Ellison - Clinica Chimica Acta, 1996 - Elsevier
... Table 6 Risk of severe coronary heart disease by alcohol intake in women: Nurses'
Health Study (n ... There is extensive evidence that alcohol raises the level ...

… Report of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute/American Heart Association Conference on … -
SM Grundy, HB Brewer, JI Cleeman, SC Smith, C … - Circulation, 2004 - Am Heart Assoc
... serum cholesterol and triglycerides, raises HDL cholesterol ... insulin resistance, and
coronary heart disease risk. ... from the Third National Health and Nutrition ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Poor Heart Health Raises Bariatric Surgery Risk

TUESDAY, Aug. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Extremely obese people with poor cardiopulmonary fitness had longer surgery times and suffered more post-surgery complications than those with higher fitness levels, a U.S. study says.

Bariatric surgery reduces the size of the stomach in order to help people lose weight.

This study included 109 morbidly obese patients with a mean body mass index (BMI) of 48.7 (for comparison purposes, a BMI of 30 is considered the threshold for obesity). They were divided into three groups. Those in the first group had the highest BMI and lowest cardiopulmonary fitness and those in the third group had the lowest BMI and the highest cardiopulmonary fitness.

 

Patients in the first group were seven times more (16.6 percent) likely to suffer primary complications -- such as death, angina, deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, renal failure and/or stroke -- than patients in the other two groups (2.8 percent).

Surgery times were also nearly 25 minutes longer in the first group than in the third group. Patients in the first group also had longer hospital stays and higher readmission rates. They were more likely to be women, smokers, older, non-Caucasian, and have diabetes and hypertension.

"Random complications may occur during bariatric surgery. However, complications may become more apparent in patients with low levels of cardiopulmonary fitness, because they have very little pulmonary reserve and have reduced ability to withstand surgery," researcher Dr. Peter A. McCullough, of William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Mich., said in a prepared statement.

The findings were published study in the August issue of the journal Chest.

More information

The American Medical Association has more about bariatric surgery.

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 

 

Continue News With: News3 ; News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast

Home Page