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UAE Studies Weight Loss Surgery as Diabetes Cure
Weight-loss surgeries,
such as gastric-bypass surgery, may become part of diabetes
treatment in the UAE, a potential headway in the country’s battle
against the metabolic disease.
The UAE has the world’s second highest number of diabetes cases,
according to the International Diabetes Federation. About 20 per
cent of the UAE population has diabetes, mostly Type II diabetes,
which is also known as adult-onset diabetes.
Dr Fawaz Chikh Torab, senior consultant and assistant professor of
anti-obesity surgery at UAE University, told Gulf News the
university was preparing to study the effects of weight-loss
surgeries on diabetes patients. |
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"We are going to
start studying people with a body-mass-index (BMI)
between 30 and 35 who also have diabetes. We will do
gastric bypass on them and see how it affects their
diabetes," he said.
"More than 100 patients will be part of the study. We
hope to start in July," he said. The international
guideline for performing gastric bypass is for people,
whose BMI is above 40, which means they are morbidly
obese. Studying the effects of gastric bypass surgery on
diabetic patients with a lower BMI would be better in
determining its positive effects and provide hope to
diabetic patients who do not satisfy international
standards for bariatric surgery.
The study is following up previous research conducted on
the positive effects of weight-loss surgery, also called
bariatric surgery, have on diabetes. Last week,
Australian researchers found patients with Type II who
underwent bariatric surgery were five times more likely
to recover from diabetes.
The study also found that gastric bypass surgery or
stomach stapling, in particular, caused diabetic
patients to recover within days or months of the
procedure. Most no longer need to take diabetes
treatment.
Dr Torab said the research team hoped the findings of
their study would pave the way for making bariatric
surgery as a cure for diabetes in the country.
"(If the study confirms previous findings), it will help
to solve the big problem of diabetes in the area," he
said. "I think in the future, bariatric surgery will be
part of standard treatment for Type II diabetes,
especially for those cases that are resistant," he said.
He also said the guideline should require bariatric
surgery to be done only after consulting a
multi-disciplinary team, including a diabetologist,
cardiologist, anesthesiologist and psychologist.
Dr Torab spoke to Gulf News after presenting his lecture
on whether diabetes should be considered a disease that
required surgical intervention at the Surgery Conference
at Arab Health.
Courtesy :
Gulf News - Report
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