Obesity Flashcards

1
Q

Healthcare costs of obesity?

A

Upto 30% of health care costs

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2
Q

Multifactorial causes of obseity?

A
  • excess calorie
  • decreased energy expenditure
  • inefficient use of calories
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3
Q

Endocrine causes of obesity?

A
  • Hypothyrodism
  • Cushing’s
  • Diabetes mellitus
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4
Q

Not all obese people get diabetes, what is the proportion?

A

20/1000

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5
Q

What is PEDF?

A

Pigment epithelium derived factor, hormone that can lead to development of T2DM

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6
Q

What is relationship between fat cells and insulin

A
  • Insulin resistance/desensitization (exhausted pancreas) from a protein released by fat cells
  • PEDF2
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7
Q

Obesity leading to high BP, how so?

A

-Must pump more blood through additional blood vessels

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8
Q

Obesity leading to OSA, how so?

A
  • hypoxia, right HF

- blocked airway during sleep, causing shallow breathing or pauses

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9
Q

TRUE or False, obese pt often consider their condition as a greater handicap than deafness, dyslexia, or blindness

A

TRUE

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10
Q

Obesity implications

A

HTN, DM2, OSA, Cancer

Infertility, GB disease, psychological

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11
Q

Link between obesity and mortality from cancer?

A
  • higher BMI shows higher mortality

- possible role for estron/estrogen from fat (both men and women)

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12
Q

What is the only weight loss system out there that was proven to work?

A
  • Weight watchers, but 10% EWL at 1yr, 6% at 2 yrs

- Long term success at 5yrs

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13
Q

How much weight do you gain by yourself every 5 years?

A
  • 2-3% every 5 years

- sometime success can be seen as preventing that added weight

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14
Q

NIH Consensus Indications for Bariatric Surgery?

A

-BMI >40, or >35 with significant comorbidities
-Failed safe non-surgical means of wt loss
(slightly out-dated guidelines)

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15
Q

Contra-indications to bariatric surgery?

A
  • Inability to follow post-op instructions (major psych illness, Down’s syndrome)
  • Drug addiction -Age >60 (soft boundaries)
  • Prohibitively high medical risk (kidney/cardiac transplant recipt)
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16
Q

What is the J curve?

A
  • Higher BMI >40 increases morality risk (about 2.5x higher)

- but BMI

17
Q

Typical gastric bypass patient?

A

Avg age 45-50

80-90% women

18
Q

Most common procedure type in Ottawa?

A

93% Rouy-en-Y gastric bypass

7% sleeve gastrectomy (success not know yet, 12 yr old only)

19
Q

Impact on Mortality of gastric surgery (Christou study), at 5 years?

A

Versus controls, surgical group had

  • 4x less cancer
  • 6x less CVS related complications
  • Mortality 10x less
20
Q

Adams NEJM, 2007, retrospective cohort for 7 years, findings?

A

All-cause mortality: 40% Risk Reduction in surgical group vs control. Less CAD (56%), Diabetes (92%), Cancer (60%)
BUT, 58% increase in suicide accidents

21
Q

Medical impact of weight loss Sx?

A

95% cure of diabetes
92% cure of HTN
90% cure of CAD, anginal
85% cure Sleep apnea

22
Q

Contra-indication to sleeve?

A

Pre-existing GERD, as a sleeve can make it worse

23
Q

Morbidly obese = BMI?

A

BMI > 40-49 or >35 with co-morbidities

or >100 lb overweight , or >200% of ideal weight

24
Q

Superobese BMI?

A

BMI >50

The bigger you are, the less your estimated weight loss of excess weight (bone, ribs, ligaments, wont shrink)

25
Q

Overweight BMI?

Obese BMI?

A

overweight 25-29

Obese 30-39

26
Q

Referral process in Ontario

A

Ontario Centralized Referral intake (1 waitlist for whole province)

27
Q

Who should have bariatric sx, besides NIH 1989 guidelines

A

Diabetes, very liberal in operating on those

28
Q

Pre-op work up for bariatric sx?

A

EKG, CXR
Hpylori serology, if positive - scope with biopsy
Sleep apnea testing if STOPBang screen +ve
Colonoscopy/FOB if >55 (rule out cancer pre-op)

29
Q

STOPBang?

A

SNORE, TIRED, OBSERVED apnea, PREssure (high)
BMI > 35, Age >50
Neck size large (male 17in, female 16in)
Gender = male

30
Q

OSA risk stratification based on Yes to STOPBang?

A

Low risk: 0 - 2 Q’s
Intermediate: 3 to 4 Q’s
High risk: 5 - 8 Q’s
or yes to >2 STOP Q’s +male/BMI/neck

31
Q

HbA1C target pre-op for bariatric?

A

7.5% and below

But answer not clear

32
Q

Blood work pre-op?

A

SMA10, LFT’s, INR/PTT, TSH
HbA1C
U/A
Pregnancy test

33
Q

Upper limit of bypass length?

A

Not more than 150-175 cm

Otherwise risk a lot of vitamin deficiency, diarrhea

34
Q

Types of Surgery done at TOH?

A

1- Proximal gastric bypass
2- Gastric sleeve (60cc to 80cc new stomach are), 60 ideal
3- BPD (bilio-pancreatic diversion) with duodenal switch (marceau)
Not so common

35
Q

Reported complications with Gastric Bypass? (4 highlighted ones)

A
  • Gastro-Jejunal stenosis 7.6%
  • PE 0.5%
  • SBO 4.4% due to internal hernia
  • Gastro-jejunal stomal ulcer (typically smokers, NSAIDs) 0.3%
36
Q

Rate of unplanned readmission to acute inpatient care within 30 days of Bariatric surgery?

A

Ottawa has highest rate in province of 9%

Database data 2012-2013, 6.3% (versus 9.4% from 2006-07)

37
Q

What amount of weight reduction is needed to see benefits?

A

10 kg (20lbs)

  • decreased HTN, Angina, dyslipidemia, Diabetes
  • First 10kg is where you see the most benefit (and so may argue sleeve is the way to go)
38
Q

What is obesity

A
  • fatty tissue accumulation from,
  • chronic over nutrition, and
  • reduced physical activity