My Strong Medicine

The adventures of a male nurse navigating through life, staying fit, surviving the journey.

Posts Tagged ‘FDA’

Kudos to the American Society of Bariatric Physicians

Posted by Sean on January 7, 2011

Apparently the ASBP has some concerns related to the recent FDA recommendation lowering the BMI requirement for gastric bypass surgery.
THIS.
IS.
AWESOME.
I’m so glad that the surgeons are speaking up about and for the patients!
This is the best line here:
“concerned that the FDA advisory panel recommended lowering the BMI requirement for lap-band surgery, while the FDA recently denied two new obesity medications”
So the FDA is OK with upping the ‘risk’ ante, but not medication? I mean of course surgery is so much easier and safer than taking a pill? Not that taking a pill doesn’t have possible detrimental effects, don’t get me wrong.
I mean wow.
Once again – Kudos.

Amplify’d from www.medicalnewstoday.com

Bariatric Physicians Question FDA Recommendations To Lower BMI Requirements For Lap-Band Surgery

The American Society of Bariatric Physicians (ASBP) is concerned that the FDA advisory panel recommended lowering the BMI requirement for lap-band surgery, while the FDA recently denied two new obesity medications. Bariatric surgery is drastic and expensive and carries higher morbidity and mortality risks than lifestyle interventions or medication. Patients who could have otherwise lost weight in a non-surgical medical bariatric program may now be encouraged to skip medical therapy and jump directly to surgery.

The ASBP supports medically-supervised weight loss programs as the treatment of choice for patients with BMIs between 30 and 35, and believes that the recommendation of the lap-band for patients with BMIs of 30 and above is premature and carries risks that have not yet been considered.

Effective, non-surgical approaches involving structured diet and exercise, behavioral modification and medication when indicated should be considered first for many patients who will now be eligible for surgery. Before a patient ever considers surgery, the ASBP advocates that the patient first seek the help of a qualified bariatric physician, who will start with a complete patient work-up, ensuring that metabolic and overall health are not compromised. Proper implementation of a medically-managed weight loss program by a bariatric physician can lead to tremendous success, with long term reversal of obesity related co-morbidities equivalent to surgical interventions minus the risks.

Bariatric surgery will continue to be an option for severely obese patients, but patients who have had bariatric surgery require long-term lifestyle changes and nutritional monitoring to ensure a safe and lasting weight loss. Bariatric surgery is often accompanied by side effects and substantial failure rates. In fact, approximately 90 percent of patients in a recent Allergan study experienced a side effect, such as vomiting or pain. Almost 30 percent of bariatric surgery patients regain the weight they initially lost or have the surgery reversed, according to long-term studies. A recent study in the American Journal of Medicine showed that there was a five-fold increase of suicides among all patients who had bariatric surgery, most occurring within three years following the surgery. Weight loss surgery also causes nutritional deficiencies requiring lifelong supplementation of calcium, vitamin B12, folate, multivitamins, iron, and thiamine.

There are benefits to surgery but more comprehensive longer-term surveillance and follow-up methods should be developed to evaluate the negative side effects. Surgery is, therefore, not a treatment that is an end in itself, and it should not be viewed as the first or only choice for obese patients.

The ASBP concludes that bariatric surgery is not a quick fix or an easy answer to the obesity epidemic. Bariatric surgery has been and should remain a second line therapy after comprehensive medically-managed weight loss. Bariatric surgery does not end one’s challenges with weight; rather, it creates new and different nutritional, medical and psychiatric challenges that must be carefully considered. In conclusion, the ASBP does not support the lowering of BMI standards to qualify for bariatric surgery.

Source: American Society of Bariatric Physicians

Read more at www.medicalnewstoday.com

 

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Anti-Smoking Seriousness

Posted by Sean on November 12, 2010

THIS.
IS.
AWESOME.
I hope they succeed.

Amplify’d from www.nytimes.com

F.D.A. Unveils Proposed Graphic Warning Labels for Cigarette Packs

WASHINGTON — Federal drug regulators on Wednesday unveiled 36 proposed warning labels for cigarette packages, including one showing a toe tag on a corpse and another in which a mother blows smoke on her baby.

Some cigarette manufacturers vowed to fight the labels in federal court, saying they infringe the companies’ property and free-speech rights. A federal judge in Kentucky ruled in January in a related lawsuit that the F.D.A. could require graphic warning labels but that a proposed restriction intended to eliminate attractive coloring from cigarette packaging infringes free speech. That ruling has been appealed.

“Sometimes images that are not as graphic may be more powerful in terms of changing behaviors,” said Dr. Lawrence R. Deyton, director of the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products.

Read more at www.nytimes.com

 

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Weight Loss In A Pill – BE CAREFUL

Posted by Sean on January 19, 2010

It seems there is no limit to the almighty dollar these days. Anything to make a buck – even if it means selling a fake product. As if FAKE was not enough, the ‘fake’ replacement product can be hazardous to some populations!

The over the counter weight loss product Alli is being subjected to a harmful scam. Buyers beware!

The FDA has cracked down on the case, be sure to visit the link below and visit the FDA’s information!

Disturbing.

FDA Warns of Fake OTC Weight-Loss Drug -from MedPage Today

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , | 3 Comments »

Dietary Supplement = Steroid??

Posted by Sean on July 25, 2009

It seems in the race to be the best, even the best intentions come with risks.

2009-07-25-092952  2009-07-25-093017

Federal authorities submitted a claim that the above dietary supplements contain steroids. Steroids, which if you didn’t know are quite illegal.

I guess these products are popular amongst the high school football athlete.

Tren Extreme and Mass Extreme, manufactured by American Cellular Labs promotes these products as a safe ‘legal’ alternative to steroids.

OOPS

The horrible effects that steroids can wreak on the human body are too numerous to discuss, let alone their effects on a growing young athlete.  Let’s just say, hospitals would be come your best friend.

Not sure where this will lead, but the manufacturer and the businesses who are selling the product aren’t sayin’ much right now.

Let’s hope it was a simple case of ‘we didn’t know’.

Posted in fitness | Tagged: , | 5 Comments »

Hydroxy-Flush

Posted by Sean on May 1, 2009

imageImage Source: theblogprof 

Hydroxycut has been on the market for well over a decade now. I admit, there was a time in my life where I HAD to try it.

My experience lasted approximately a week.

I was taking the supplement prior to my workouts. By the time I made it to the gym, I was heading straight to the bathroom. It was like an instant colonic for me. For some reason my body and my Gastro-Intestinal system did not like what the pill was offering me. All this supplement did for me in terms of weight loss was dehydrate me due to a severe case of diarrhea.

So as you can imagine, my support for Hydroxycut was non-existent.

(By the way the word colonic is just a nice Politically Correct (PC) term for Enema. Don’t believe me? Just ask anyone who has suffered through an enema to describe the details.)

But I digress.

Fast-forward to the present. It seems that the FDA has announced the recall of this product due to the possibility of it causing severe and permanent damage to one’s liver.

Things that make you go hmm.

image

I want to thank WhiteCoat over at WhiteCoat’s Call Room for letting us know about this.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: | 4 Comments »

 
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