New tool to fight obesity.

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New tool to fight obesity.

Postby Phlegm » Thu Apr 27, 2006 11:53 am

From Reuters:

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota (Reuters) -- The company that invented the heart pacemaker is employing the same technology to trick obese patients into thinking their stomachs are full.

And Medtronic Inc., the world's biggest maker of medical devices, is not the only medical technology company trying to tap into the $100 billion obesity market.

While Medtronic is trying to develop a battery-powered gastric pacemaker that causes the stomach to contract, sending signals of satiety to the appetite center in the brain, a small start-up also is working with the famed Mayo Clinic on a device that uses electricity to paralyze the stomach, reducing or stopping contractions that churn food as part of the digestion process.

Doctors and companies across the United States are looking at various technologies to combat obesity, including brain stimulation. These methods, though not completely understood by doctors, may be preferable to bariatric surgery since device-based treatments are reversible and have fewer side effects.

Despite failures so far of some devices in clinical trials, companies are pushing ahead, convinced that medical devices hold the key to battling obesity.

Medtronic said it remains committed to solving obesity, largely untapped by the medtech sector, even though its implantable gastric stimulator, or IGS, failed to prove effective in a clinical trial in achieving excess weight loss after 12 months, said the new chief of the company's neurological business, Dr. Richard Kuntz.

Kuntz said the market for all therapy related to obesity is $100 billion; the market for the severely obese is $5 billion to $10 billion.

"We think that's conservative ... we think we could grow that market very quickly," Kuntz said in a recent interview from the company's headquarters in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Medtronic's stopwatch-size IGS, which the company acquired through its $260 million purchase of Transneuronix last year, is implanted under the skin of the abdomen with electric wires placed on the wall of the stomach.

The device "paces" the stomach by delivering small electrical currents that cause the stomach to contract.

Kuntz said he was not too discouraged by the trial's failure because there are still questions about the settings that should be used on the implants, such as how much voltage should be delivered and the frequency of stimulation.

Kuntz, a cardiologist by training, said Medtronic would also look at its deep brain stimulation technology -- which uses tiny electrodes implanted in specific areas of the brain to affect behavior, movement and other functions -- as a possible treatment for obesity.

Brain stimulation technology is currently approved in the United States to treat movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease and is being studied to treat obsessive compulsive disorder and severe depression.

"If we can salvage IGS, that's probably our fastest way to that market," Kuntz said, adding that it could be as soon as three or four years from now.

In another laboratory in Minneapolis -- a city once dominated by flour mills that has evolved into a hotbed for medical technology -- medtech start-up Enteromedics Inc. is working with the Mayo Clinic on its own implantable device to fight obesity.

But rather than stimulating the stomach like Medtronic's IGS device, privately held Enteromedics is trying to inhibit nerve function by using electrical currents to block the Vagus Nerve, one of five cranial nerves.

The device, called Maestro, is also inserted beneath the skin of the abdomen, with connecting electrical leads placed on the stomach. The electrical pulses block the Vagus Nerve and paralyze the stomach, stopping contractions that churn food as part of the digestion process, said William Sandborn, one of the gastroenterologists at the Mayo Clinic working with Enteromedics.

"The way the device is used is still evolving," Sandborn said, noting that the initial trial included only 15 patients.

The goal is to slow digestion so that the patient feels sated longer. The device also shuts down the pancreas and the secretions of digestive enzymes. The process effectively causes the patient to absorb less food, and thus calories, Sandborn said, noting that is partly the reason gastric bypass surgery works.

Mark Knudson, president and chief executive of Enteromedics -- a company with just 40 employees, some of them from Medtronic -- said he hopes to announce clinical results from human trials this year.

The only approved medical device that addresses obesity is the Lapband, owned by Allergan.

Bariatric surgery, including gastric bands like the Lapband, is the only effective permanent solution, doctors say. A commercially available implantable device may be years away from being approved in the United States, they say.
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Postby vonkaar » Thu Apr 27, 2006 12:02 pm

$100 billion obesity market
:sumo:
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Postby leah » Thu Apr 27, 2006 12:13 pm

hrmm...

an interesting proposal; however, my problem has never been with whether or not i feel FULL... it's more of a comfort-object, boredom-reducer thing. like, i don't necessarily eat because i feel like i'm hungry... sometimes i'm just bored and munching keeps me occupied, or i'm sad so i chow down on my favorite foods.

the key to fixing obesity is to attack it psychologically rather than physically, imho.
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Postby Jay » Thu Apr 27, 2006 12:14 pm

the SESGDM diet from The Man Show is the best diet ever.
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Postby Markarado » Thu May 11, 2006 12:39 am

When I smoke marijuana I'm not really hungry, but I feel like eating. A pill telling me I'm fully wouldn't do shit for me =P
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Postby Gidan » Thu May 11, 2006 7:55 am

Having never been overweight I could be way off here but, when my friends and I in college got bored, rather then eat we went out for a run or to the gym. The ones that were overweight said they felt the best they ever had though it could just be they had people motivating them.
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Postby Tikker » Thu May 11, 2006 8:06 am

Gidan wrote:Having never been overweight I could be way off here but, when my friends and I in college got bored, rather then eat we went out for a run or to the gym. The ones that were overweight said they felt the best they ever had though it could just be they had people motivating them.


I definately know that my lack of a 6 pack is a result of lack of motivation

now that I'm not competing in anything anymore, it's hard to justify going out for a run when the whether isn't perfect AND i feel like it
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Postby Minrott » Thu May 18, 2006 2:16 pm

now that I'm not competing in anything anymore,


That's my problem. Once I was done with football, I quit lifting and wouldn't even think of running. So I've set myself to enter next years Toughman boxing match here, now I have a goal and it's about competition with others, rather than with myself and I find it much easier to hit the weights/bags/road.
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Postby Eziekial » Sat May 20, 2006 10:53 am

[quote="leah"]hrmm...

an interesting proposal; however, my problem has never been with whether or not i feel FULL... it's more of a comfort-object, boredom-reducer thing. like, i don't necessarily eat because i feel like i'm hungry... sometimes i'm just bored and munching keeps me occupied, or i'm sad so i chow down on my favorite foods.

the key to fixing obesity is to attack it psychologically rather than physically, imho.[/quote]

Must......control.......pervented.......thoughts........ :locked:
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