Open Access
Morbid obesity in clinical practice: current treatment concepts
Author(s) -
К. А. Анисимова,
Анисимова Кристина Александровна,
Dmitrij I. Vasilevsky,
Василевский Дмитрий Игоревич,
С. Г. Баландов,
Баландов Станислав Георгиевич,
З. М. Хамид,
Хамид Зарина Михайловна
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
pediatr
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2587-6252
pISSN - 2079-7850
DOI - 10.17816/ped11663-69
Subject(s) - medicine , obesity , weight loss , diabetes mellitus , psychological intervention , intensive care medicine , morbid obesity , surgery , endocrinology , psychiatry
The article discusses modern methods of treatment of morbid obesity and associated diseases. It is known that obesity leads to disability in people, including young people, due to the frequent development of severe comorbid diseases. According to current clinical guidelines, the main goals of treating obese patients are: weight loss, achieving good metabolic control, and improving the course of diseases associated with obesity. A small selection of drugs for the treatment of obesity, the need for strict adherence to indications and contraindications to their appointment, significantly limits the possibilities of drug therapy for morbid obesity. With morbid obesity, the effectiveness of conservative treatment is only 510%. Up to 60% of patients cannot maintain the result of weight loss within 5 years of observation. Long-term use of bariatric surgeries, the purpose of which was initially to reduce body weight in patients with morbid obesity, showed certain possibilities of surgery in compensating for a number of diseases associated with obesity. Therefore, at present, the concept of bariatric surgery is not only to reduce the patients weight, but also to achieve beneficial metabolic effects (normalization of glycemia, lipid metabolism). In this regard, modern bariatric interventions are united by the term metabolic surgery. It has been proven that compensation of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus after bariatric interventions is observed in 4295% of patients, depending on the type of surgery, duration of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and basal C-peptide level. As a result of many years of research, bariatric surgery has allowed for the first time to formulate the term remission of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.