Published 2003
| Version v1
Publication
Recovery of insulin sensitivity in obese patients at short term after biliopancreatic diversion.
Contributors
Description
OBJECTIVE: To gain insight into the specific mechanisms by which biliopancreatic
diversion (BPD) can improve insulin action.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Nondiabetic severely obese patients (n=20) undergoing BPD
were included. Waist-to-hip ratio and serum concentration of glucose, insulin,
and leptin were determined before, at 4-day, and at 2 months after the operation.
Insulin sensitivity was calculated according to the homeostatic model assessment
(HOMA IR).
RESULTS: A marked increase of insulin sensitivity was observed by the fourth day
after the operation; at the second postoperative month, when body weight was
still in the obese range and the food intake was substantially similar to the
preoperative one, a further improvement of insulin action towards normality was
found. Moreover, before BPD HOMA IR data were independently correlated both to
BMI and waist-to-hip ratio values, whereas at 2 months after the operation data
were in positive correlation only with the BMI.
DISCUSSION: In obese patients, BPD seems to achieve recovery of insulin
sensitivity by specific mechanisms independent of weight loss: the main causes of
this sharp improvement might be both the intramyocellular fat depletion and the
interruption of enteroinsular axis.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/391736
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/391736
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE