|
Liposuction
Cuts Fat But Not
Heart, Blood Pressure Risks
Liposuction may let doctors extract body fat, but it doesn't trim
the risk of heart disease or diabetes the same way losing weight
would, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis reported.
Although volunteers lost 12 percent
of their body weight -- most of it fat tissue -- their blood pressure,
insulin levels, cholesterol levels and other risk factors for
heart and blood sugar problems remained unchanged.
"They're still obese. But had they
lost that same amount of weight by dieting, they would have exhibited
considerable improvements in their cardiovascular risk factors,"
Samuel Klein, director of the university's Center for Human Nutrition,
told Reuters.
The finding means liposuction is
no substitute for weight loss produced by diet and exercise, he
said.
Liposuction is performed on nearly
400,000 people in the United States each year, making it the most
common cosmetic operation in the country.
Because the risk of heart disease
and diabetes is tied to the amount of body fat a person carries,
some doctors had suggested that liposuction might reduce those
risks.
But the new study in New England
of Medicine has dashed those hopes.
It "provides useful objective evidence
that even large-volume liposuction has little effect on insulin
sensitivity or cardiovascular risk factors," said David Kelley
of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, in a Journal editorial.
Although liposuction reduces the
number of fat cells in the body, it doesn't reduce the plumpness
of the remaining cells. Klein said it now appears that the size
of the fat cells may be more important than previously recognized.
"It may be necessary to shrink
fat cells and reduce fat content in other tissues," he said.
"It is striking that the amount
of fat loss achieved by liposuction in our diabetic and nondiabetic
subjects did not improve any of these metabolic outcomes," such
as reducing blood pressure, the researchers wrote.
The average weight among the eight
volunteers with no diabetes went from 220 pounds down to 206 pounds
and they lost nearly 6 inches off their 44-inch waistline. For
the seven patients with diabetes, about 17 pounds of fat tissue
and 5 inches was removed from their waistlines, but they still
had bellies averaging 43 inches.
Klein said the authors of earlier
studies might have been misled into thinking the liposuction had
broader health benefits because people who have the surgery often
take other steps to further reduce their weight, steps that might
cut the risk of heart disease and diabetes. It was that supplemental
weight loss effort that probably produced the health benefits.
"This study is definitive," said
Klein. "After liposuction, people tend to change their lifestyle.
When we prevented that from happening, we showed there was no
metabolic benefit for liposuction."
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|