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Gastric bypass surgery patients often find it's not a cure for

depression

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

By Alana Semuels, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

It's an unnerving thing, to live every day so obese that people

mutter under their breath when you walk by, and then, over the

course of a year, to drop the weight of one person off your body.

Imagine the pounds shedding away, the new clothes to buy, the

reactions of people you've known for years, the activities now

available -- like taking a ride at Kennywood -- that you could never

do before.

It would be hard not to think that this weight loss could solve

everything -- from that elusive promotion at work to a lackluster

relationship. It can change the way you look, why wouldn't it change

the way you feel?

Janet Forton, 42, who five years after gastric bypass surgery is

almost half her previous weight, remembers crying tears of joy after

she lost the first 12 pounds after the surgery. She remembers her

son giving her a hug and wrapping his arms all the way around her

body, something he had never been able to do before. So many things

in her life were getting better.

But she now knows that gastric bypass is not the cure-all that some

expect it to be, and as the number of such procedures done

increases, doctors are becoming more aware of the need to emphasize

this to patients. Morbidly obese patients often have symptoms of

depression that surgery can help lessen, but more often than not,

patients with clinical depression before surgery will still have it

afterwards.

" It's not a silver bullet, " Forton, who lives in , said of the

surgery's capacity to kill off depression. She was treated for it

for 20 years before her operation and remains in therapy

today. " There are certainly people who think that it's going to

solve everything -- that's not necessarily the case. "

Worst-case scenario

There's no way to know why the three individuals who ended up in the

Allegheny County Coroner's office chose to end their lives.

The only thing they all had in common was that they all had

undergone gastric bypass, also called bariatric surgery. It seemed

to be successful; two patients had lost more than 100 pounds, one

more than 70.

But over the course of a year between 2004 and 2005, all three

decided to end their lives. In the previous two years in Allegheny

County, there had been no suicides after bariatric surgery,

according to the coroner's office.

While likely mere coincidence, the deaths prompted the coroner's

office to write a paper to be published this summer in Surgery for

Obesity and Related Diseases, the official journal of the American

Society for Bariatric Surgery, stating that depressive disorder may

persist after successful surgical control of obesity.

" The risk of suicide does not go down with body weight, " said Dr.

Omalu, a forensic and neuropathologist with the coroner's

office. The surgery " does not cure depressive illnesses. "

Depression and obesity

Candidates for gastric bypass are usually more than 100 pounds over

their ideal body weight. This type of obesity can bring a huge

burden of psychiatric and psychological problems, said Dr.

Friday, chief of clinical psychology at UPMC Shadyside.

" Many of these people are sick and tired of being laughed at in the

mall, " he said.

The best research available suggests a relationship between obesity

and symptoms of depression, said Dr. Kalarchian, assistant

professor of psychiatry at UPMC's Western Psychiatric Institute and

Clinic, who has collaborated with other doctors there to conduct an

in-depth assessment of the psychiatric state of over 200 bariatric

surgery candidates.

She will present the results of the study on Friday at the annual

meeting of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery in Orlando,

Fla.

" We're seeing high rates of depression and other psychiatric

disorders, " Kalarchian said, and although she could not release

figures in advance of the presentation, she said that people who

seek surgery might have a higher rate of depression than individuals

in the community.

Kalarchian and her colleagues are following the progress of these

patients through the surgery and afterwards.

Doctors emphasize that being depressed would not prevent a candidate

from getting the surgery, but severely depressed individuals would

be treated for their mental health problems before having a surgery

that can be difficult to adjust to in itself.

" Losing weight can be stressful in good and bad ways, " said

Kalarchian.

In the past five years, insurance companies and hospitals have

started mandating that candidates for gastric bypass be screened to

make sure they can handle the mental issues related to it. The

screenings also try to help candidates understand what they can and

can't expect from the surgery.

UPMC's weight management program has done these screenings for about

10 years, although they've only been mandatory for five, said

Madelyn Fernstrom, associate professor and director of the UPMC

Weight Management Center. They're useful in dispelling the notion

that surgery is a quick fix, she said.

" One thing the surgery will do is allow you to eat less food, " she

said. " It's not going to make you exercise, it's not going to make

your marriage better. "

Still, it's difficult to pinpoint exactly what it is that would make

someone react badly to surgery. A previous mental health problem is

probably one sign, but some people can develop issues after the

surgery just because they miss certain foods that they can't eat

anymore, or their old lifestyle.

Post-surgery

On average, many patients' moods seem to improve after bariatric

surgery, at least in the short term. The physical problems that

plagued them become less prominent, and patients often have more

energy and feel healthier. Many sleep more easily.

But a study done at the East Carolina University School of Medicine

in the early days of bariatric surgery found that the significant

improvements in mental health immediately after the surgery

disappeared by the end of two years in most patients.

If depression or other mental health problems continue after

surgery, patients might experience problems such as binge eating,

anorexia, and bulimia.

Or, in rare cases, suicide.

Doctors emphasize the need for follow-up to prevent this, and to

ensure that patients are eating right and exercising enough to stay

healthy after surgery.

Many hospitals offer support groups for people who have been through

gastric bypass, but none can mandate that patients receive

counseling or mental health treatment.

Janet Forton remembers going through a grieving process after the

surgery, for happy though she was to leave her old life behind, it

was still a big transition.

Still, before the surgery, despite the screening and packets of

information she received, Forton had hoped that maybe the depression

would go away. She knew it probably wouldn't, but if the surgery

changed everything else, why wouldn't it change the feelings that

brought her down?

Everything seems to be going her way now -- she's not having any

trouble losing weight, has a new job, is working on a master's

degree, and for the first time since she was 9, she isn't overweight.

But even though she feels on top of the world, she knows that the

depression is still there, and needs to be treated.

" It's a chemical imbalance in my brain, " she said. " Those chemicals

didn't change, and I wasn't sure if they would. "

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-Good Informative article Robyn!

Thanks,

Tami B.-- In GastricBypass-LOSERS , " Robyn@G... "

<Robyn@G...> wrote:

> Gastric bypass surgery patients often find it's not a cure for

> depression

> Wednesday, June 29, 2005

>

> By Alana Semuels, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

>

> It's an unnerving thing, to live every day so obese that people

> mutter under their breath when you walk by, and then, over the

> course of a year, to drop the weight of one person off your body.

>

>

> Imagine the pounds shedding away, the new clothes to buy, the

> reactions of people you've known for years, the activities now

> available -- like taking a ride at Kennywood -- that you could

never

> do before.

>

> It would be hard not to think that this weight loss could solve

> everything -- from that elusive promotion at work to a lackluster

> relationship. It can change the way you look, why wouldn't it

change

> the way you feel?

>

> Janet Forton, 42, who five years after gastric bypass surgery is

> almost half her previous weight, remembers crying tears of joy

after

> she lost the first 12 pounds after the surgery. She remembers her

> son giving her a hug and wrapping his arms all the way around her

> body, something he had never been able to do before. So many

things

> in her life were getting better.

>

> But she now knows that gastric bypass is not the cure-all that

some

> expect it to be, and as the number of such procedures done

> increases, doctors are becoming more aware of the need to

emphasize

> this to patients. Morbidly obese patients often have symptoms of

> depression that surgery can help lessen, but more often than not,

> patients with clinical depression before surgery will still have

it

> afterwards.

>

> " It's not a silver bullet, " Forton, who lives in , said of

the

> surgery's capacity to kill off depression. She was treated for it

> for 20 years before her operation and remains in therapy

> today. " There are certainly people who think that it's going to

> solve everything -- that's not necessarily the case. "

>

>

> Worst-case scenario

>

>

> There's no way to know why the three individuals who ended up in

the

> Allegheny County Coroner's office chose to end their lives.

>

> The only thing they all had in common was that they all had

> undergone gastric bypass, also called bariatric surgery. It seemed

> to be successful; two patients had lost more than 100 pounds, one

> more than 70.

>

> But over the course of a year between 2004 and 2005, all three

> decided to end their lives. In the previous two years in Allegheny

> County, there had been no suicides after bariatric surgery,

> according to the coroner's office.

>

> While likely mere coincidence, the deaths prompted the coroner's

> office to write a paper to be published this summer in Surgery for

> Obesity and Related Diseases, the official journal of the American

> Society for Bariatric Surgery, stating that depressive disorder

may

> persist after successful surgical control of obesity.

>

> " The risk of suicide does not go down with body weight, " said Dr.

> Omalu, a forensic and neuropathologist with the coroner's

> office. The surgery " does not cure depressive illnesses. "

>

>

> Depression and obesity

>

>

> Candidates for gastric bypass are usually more than 100 pounds

over

> their ideal body weight. This type of obesity can bring a huge

> burden of psychiatric and psychological problems, said Dr.

> Friday, chief of clinical psychology at UPMC Shadyside.

>

> " Many of these people are sick and tired of being laughed at in

the

> mall, " he said.

>

> The best research available suggests a relationship between

obesity

> and symptoms of depression, said Dr. Kalarchian, assistant

> professor of psychiatry at UPMC's Western Psychiatric Institute

and

> Clinic, who has collaborated with other doctors there to conduct

an

> in-depth assessment of the psychiatric state of over 200 bariatric

> surgery candidates.

>

> She will present the results of the study on Friday at the annual

> meeting of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery in Orlando,

> Fla.

>

> " We're seeing high rates of depression and other psychiatric

> disorders, " Kalarchian said, and although she could not release

> figures in advance of the presentation, she said that people who

> seek surgery might have a higher rate of depression than

individuals

> in the community.

>

> Kalarchian and her colleagues are following the progress of these

> patients through the surgery and afterwards.

>

> Doctors emphasize that being depressed would not prevent a

candidate

> from getting the surgery, but severely depressed individuals would

> be treated for their mental health problems before having a

surgery

> that can be difficult to adjust to in itself.

>

> " Losing weight can be stressful in good and bad ways, " said

> Kalarchian.

>

> In the past five years, insurance companies and hospitals have

> started mandating that candidates for gastric bypass be screened

to

> make sure they can handle the mental issues related to it. The

> screenings also try to help candidates understand what they can

and

> can't expect from the surgery.

>

> UPMC's weight management program has done these screenings for

about

> 10 years, although they've only been mandatory for five, said

> Madelyn Fernstrom, associate professor and director of the UPMC

> Weight Management Center. They're useful in dispelling the notion

> that surgery is a quick fix, she said.

>

> " One thing the surgery will do is allow you to eat less food, " she

> said. " It's not going to make you exercise, it's not going to make

> your marriage better. "

>

> Still, it's difficult to pinpoint exactly what it is that would

make

> someone react badly to surgery. A previous mental health problem

is

> probably one sign, but some people can develop issues after the

> surgery just because they miss certain foods that they can't eat

> anymore, or their old lifestyle.

>

>

> Post-surgery

>

>

> On average, many patients' moods seem to improve after bariatric

> surgery, at least in the short term. The physical problems that

> plagued them become less prominent, and patients often have more

> energy and feel healthier. Many sleep more easily.

>

> But a study done at the East Carolina University School of

Medicine

> in the early days of bariatric surgery found that the significant

> improvements in mental health immediately after the surgery

> disappeared by the end of two years in most patients.

>

> If depression or other mental health problems continue after

> surgery, patients might experience problems such as binge eating,

> anorexia, and bulimia.

>

> Or, in rare cases, suicide.

>

> Doctors emphasize the need for follow-up to prevent this, and to

> ensure that patients are eating right and exercising enough to

stay

> healthy after surgery.

>

> Many hospitals offer support groups for people who have been

through

> gastric bypass, but none can mandate that patients receive

> counseling or mental health treatment.

>

> Janet Forton remembers going through a grieving process after the

> surgery, for happy though she was to leave her old life behind, it

> was still a big transition.

>

> Still, before the surgery, despite the screening and packets of

> information she received, Forton had hoped that maybe the

depression

> would go away. She knew it probably wouldn't, but if the surgery

> changed everything else, why wouldn't it change the feelings that

> brought her down?

>

> Everything seems to be going her way now -- she's not having any

> trouble losing weight, has a new job, is working on a master's

> degree, and for the first time since she was 9, she isn't

overweight.

>

> But even though she feels on top of the world, she knows that the

> depression is still there, and needs to be treated.

>

> " It's a chemical imbalance in my brain, " she said. " Those

chemicals

> didn't change, and I wasn't sure if they would. "

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