ProNUTRITION

Photo by Iain McLellan for AED, FANTA Project  

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[pronut-hiv] BBC: New way to treat obesity heralded


  • From: "ProNut-HIV" <pronut-hiv@healthnet.org>
  • Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 10:17:41 -0400

New way to treat obesity heralded

Topping up levels of a hormone found naturally in the stomach could be
a new way to treat obesity.
Boosting oxyntomodulin limits appetite and raises activity levels at
the same time - leading to speedy but healthy weight loss rates, a UK
study suggests.

The hormone tells us we are full after a meal, but the obese have less
of it.

The fact dieting tends to lead to reductions in activity often makes
weight loss harder, the International Journal of Obesity study says.

Professor Steve Bloom head of the Division of Investigative Science at
Imperial College London said earlier studies had shown oxyntomodulin
decreased appetite.

But this was the first time it had been shown to increase physical
activity levels.

The fact that oxyntomodulin was naturally found in the body was also an
advantage as it was unlikely to have unpleasant side-effects, he said.

"It's not like one of those nasty drugs where you have to take some
horrible chemical for years.

"It is naturally a occurring hormone. We are using the body's own
method of limiting appetite."

There are some conditions where people have high levels of the hormone
after certain types of injuries to the gut, for example, and they tend
to lose a lot of weight and stay very thin.

And there do not appear to be any harmful effects of having high levels
of oxyntomodulin, he said pointing to some medical conditions that
produce this.

The only side-effect appears to be sustained weight loss, he said

Increasing exercise

Fatter people tend to have lower levels of the hormone and therefore
cannot recognise when they are full.

So treatment would restore obese and overweight people's levels of the
hormone to their correct levels.

He envisages people giving themselves daily injections like diabetes
patients do with insulin.

"If people strip half naked in the street, exposing themselves to the
public to undertake this exercise called jogging then I can't see that
they would have a problem with taking this hormone," he said.

The study looked at 15 healthy overweight male and female volunteers,
aged between 23 and 49.

They were divided into two groups, with one being given doses of
oxyntomodulin three times a day for four days and others saline.

Obesity epidemic

On the fourth day, volunteers returned to have their energy expenditure
and food intake measured.

After the first meal volunteers ate on average 128 kcal or 17.4% less,
while energy expenditure increased by 143 kcals or more than a quarter.


The team also found body weight was reduced by 0.5% over the four days.


This would translate to a weight loss of around a pound or half a kilo
a week, Professor Bloom said.

"The discovery could provide doctors with a whole new way to treat the
obesity epidemic. We need to get away from the focus on food and start
to think about how to increase exercise," he added.

Dr Colin Waine, Chairman of the National Obesity Forum, said the
research was very exciting and opened up a potentially exciting new way
of tackling a major health issue.

He said it does not negate the need for people to eat a balanced diet
and exercise regularly, around 30 minutes daily, he said.

"But it really increases our physiological understanding of the problem
and opens up a new therapeutic approach."