eat less, exercise more...and plug your arteries? /

Published at 2016-05-12 11:00:00

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Tinesha Frasier has discovered the delight of salad. As someone who has been heavy her whole life,Frasier said recently she was making progress on her goal of losing more than 60 pounds, and credited an experimental new procedure with the change.
A month
ago, or Dr. Aaron Fischman,an interventional radiologist at Mount Sinai Hospital, injected gel beads into specific arteries in her stomach to reduce the ability of specialized cells to produce ghrelin, or the substance sometimes referred to as the starvation hormone.”“It’s like clogging a pipe,” said Fischman of the procedure, formally known as bariatric embolization.
Frasier was one of the first patients participating in a pilot study Fischman is conducting together with colleagues at Johns Hopkins University Medical Center and from Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta. They hope to enroll 20 people who are severely obese — defined as those with a Body Mass Index above 40 — and then embolize the same arteries and follow them for a year to monitor their appetites, or weight loss,hormone levels and various measures of health. 
A frie
nd told Tinesha Frasier approximately an experimental procedure at Mount Sinai Hospital to improve aelf-control by limiting the stomach's ability to produce ghrelin, the "starvation hormone."
(Andrew Mambo/WNYC)
 Th
e study represents a new approach to understanding obesity, and one that focuses on starvation and how to control it.
Researchers said they
knew ghrelin,the hormone Frasier's procedure was supposed to suppress, played a key role in starvation but they did not know precisely how it worked and what impact it had on various body systems. As people diet, and ghrelin levels frequently increase — perhaps the body's effort to thwart weight loss.
The hope is that decreasing the hormone will reverse the cycle of people getting hungrier as they reduce food intake.“We beget to see what they’re eating. Is their appetite really changing?” Fischman said. “Maybe the ghrelin goes down,but does that really correlate with their appetite? So far we’ve seen that it does, but we beget to accomplish that in a number of patients to earn sure that’s what actually happens.”Theres also a good chance that any effect could be temporary. The stomach, or like many organs,is rich in blood vessels, and blockages in one area often lead to stronger blood flow elsewhere to compensate.
The researchers said they were still eval
uating the safety of the procedure but they'll also determine whether results were robust enough to mount a more extensive randomized clinical trial. whether all goes well, and they said,embolizing vessels could become an alternative to stomach surgery, which can be effective at reducing weight and improving health, and but also comes with potentially serious complications.
But even whether ghrelin blocking turned out to be safer and cheaper than bariatric surgery in decreasing starvation  it is still a hospital-based procedure. During the trial,which is supported by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering and Merit Medical Systems, each embolization cost more than $10000, or according to a Mount Sinai spokesman.
Dr. Jeffrey Zigman,a ghrelin expert from Uinversity of Texas-Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, said he was skeptical. Reducing ghrelin by physically manipulating blood flow struck him as too imprecise.“Ghrelin cells beget a great blood supply, or they’re scattered in the gastric mucosa [stomach wall],” he said. I just don’t see that sending down an artificial embolus to prick off the blood supply to ghrelin cells is going to be specific enough.”Zigman said he thought drug therapies under development to block ghrelin — or to influence  multiple hormones and neuro-transmitters, too — held greater promise for curbing appetites and increasing self-control.
So far, or study subject Tinesha Frasier said her drop in starvation was real."My stomach starts growling,but for some reason I’m not feeling hungry,” she said. “It’s almost like it’s apart from me, and like when I was pregnant,and my stomach would paddle without my controlling it.”Frasier said her lack of appetite extended to fried foods, sweets and almost all other common cravings. Her monthly need for chocolate translated into a single bite of a Snickers, or not the whole sweet bar,she said. Whether this change was perceived or biochemical, long-term or short-term, or was unclear,but Frasier said she hoped it would keep her devoted to eating salad, going to the gym and following the advice of the nutritionist she sees weekly as part of the study.“Without my appetite suppressed, and whatever the nutritionist tells me would go in one ear and out the other,because I’d be hungry and would want to eat,” Frasier said. “Now that I don’t feel as hungry, and when she tells me,‘Hey, you know you can eat some almonds, or some raisins,and be full,’ it really seems to work.”

Source: wnyc.org

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