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STUDY: SURGICAL WEIGHT LOSS DOES NOT ELIMINATE
OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP APNEA -- "We were surprised by
the
severity of the residual sleep apnea in
postoperative patients."

For more information about sleep apnea, use the
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Story here...
http://healthknowledge
s.org/2008/08/17/study-shows-that-surgical-w
eight-loss-does-not-eliminate-obstructive-sleep-apnea/
Story below:
-------------------------
Study shows that
surgical weight loss does not eliminate obstructive sleep apnea
Westchester, Ill. A study in the August 15 issue of the Journal of
Clinical Sleep Medicine shows that surgical weight loss results in an
improvement of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), but most patients continue
to have moderate to severe OSA one year after undergoing bariatric
surgery. .Results of this study suggest that it is the severity of the
condition, rather than a patient’s presurgical weight, that determines if
OSA will be resolved.
Results show that bariatric surgery reduced body mass index (BMI) from an
average of 51 to 32 in 24 adults with OSA. At the one-year follow-up,
however, only one participant (4 percent) experienced a resolution of OSA,
and the majority of the study group (71 percent) still had moderate to
severe OSA. Patients who have residual OSA after surgery are encouraged to
maintain ongoing treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
therapy.
The
prevalence of OSA among obese individuals is high and correlates with
increasing BMI; among the severely obese, the prevalence of OSA ranges
from 55 percent to 90 percent. OSA itself may promote weight gain through
ineffective sleep, impaired glucose metabolism and imbalances of leptin,
ghrelin and orexin levels.
“We were surprised by the severity of the residual sleep apnea in
postoperative patients,” said principal investigator Christopher J.
Lettieri, MD, Chief of Sleep Medicine at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
“The majority of individuals still had moderate to severe OSA.”
“The second surprising finding of this study was that despite the
persistence and severity of the disease, most people thought their sleep
apnea was resolved after their weight loss and only a few still used CPAP,”
he said.
According to Lettieri, weight loss has many overall benefits; however,
most people should not assume their OSA will be resolved after they have
lost weight. The baseline apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), a measure used to
identify the presence of OSA and define its severity, is the most
important determinant of whether or not an individual will be cured of the
disease. Individuals with a lower AHI may experience complete resolution
of their OSA.
Twenty-four consecutive patients referred to the Pulmonary Critical Care
and Sleep Medicine Service for preoperative evaluation of excessive
daytime somnolence (EDS) prior to bariatric surgery were included in the
study. Patients on average were 47.9 years, and most (75 percent) were
women. Each was assessed by overnight polysomnography prior to and one
year after undergoing bariatric surgery.
Postoperative polysomnography revealed reductions in the AHI in 22
subjects. Of the 12 patients whose AHI improved sufficiently to reclassify
their OSA severity, three (12.5 percent) improved by more than one
category of severity. Twenty-three patients had persistent OSA at
follow-up. One patient had AHI less than five and no longer met the
criteria for a diagnosis of OSA.
Although only seven patients (29 percent) subjectively complained of
snoring postoperatively, all but one (96 percent) snored during the
follow-up polysomnography. Significant improvements were noted on the
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (EES); however, nearly half reported a
persistence of daytime somnolence and more than half (54 percent)
continued to have ESS scores greater than 10.
The authors of this study note that patients and physicians need to
recognize that the subjective resolution of snoring after surgical weight
loss does not equate to improvements or cure of OSA.
A media fact sheet about obstructive sleep apnea is available from the
AASM at
http://www.aasmnet.org/Resources/FactSheets/SleepApnea.pdf.
Information from the AASM for patients
and the public is available about OSA at
http://www.sleepeducation.com/Disorder.aspx?id=7
and about CPAP at
http://www.sleepeducation.com/CPAPCentral/.
The Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine is the official publication of the
AASM.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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