CHICAGO, (Reuters) – Weight loss surgery appears to change the body’s metabolism in a way that dieting alone cannot, helping to explain why diabetes often disappears after the surgery even before much weight is lost, U.S. researchers said yesterday.
Understanding how gastric bypass affects metabolism could shed light on treatments for type 2 diabetes, a global epidemic strongly linked with obesity and too little exercise.
Weight loss surgery is becoming increasingly popular as obese people struggle to lose weight and avoid the health complications that accompany the extra pounds — including diabetes, heart disease, joint pain and some cancers.
In research conducted at Columbia University in New York and Duke University in North Carolina, researchers studied two small groups of severely obese diabetic patients who either had gastric bypass surgery or went on strict diets.
Both groups lost about 20 pounds.
For the study, the teams measured metabolites — chemical byproducts of foods in the body.
They found that unlike dieting, gastric bypass changes a person’s metabolism by significantly reducing levels of circulating amino acids — compounds linked with obesity, diabetes and insulin resistance.
“What we were trying to do is cast a very wide net,” said Christopher Newgard of Duke, who worked on the study published in Science Translational Medicine.