Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients

<p>Background: Bariatric surgery produces marked weight loss and improvement in comorbid health conditions among individuals with Class II or Class III obesity (Class I = 30.0 &le; BMI &le; 34.9kg/m2; Class II = 35.0 &le; BMI &ge; 39.9kg/m2; Class III = BMI &ge; 40 kg/m2)....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martinez, Erin Elena
Other Authors: Surwit, Richard
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9074
id ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-9074
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-90742014-08-29T03:28:37ZPostoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass PatientsMartinez, Erin ElenaPsychologybariatric surgerygastric bypassobesitypredictors of weight losspsychologicalsurgical success<p>Background: Bariatric surgery produces marked weight loss and improvement in comorbid health conditions among individuals with Class II or Class III obesity (Class I = 30.0 &le; BMI &le; 34.9kg/m2; Class II = 35.0 &le; BMI &ge; 39.9kg/m2; Class III = BMI &ge; 40 kg/m2). However, suboptimal weight outcomes occur in a significant minority of patients. Evidence suggests that psychological and behavioral factors might affect weight loss, but most of the literature has focused on preoperative factors, with mixed results. The current study tested the hypothesis that postoperative depressive symptoms, eating behaviors, and lower levels of physical activity would be associated with poorer weight loss outcomes. Method: Preoperative data were obtained from an extant clinical database, and postoperative data were collected via a mail or online questionnaire in a sample of 141 female Roux-en-y gastric bypass (RYGB) patients at an average of 16.80 (SD=2.20) months post-surgery. Self-report measures assessed cognitive-affective and somatic symptoms of depression; binge eating, grazing, night eating, distress about overeating or loss of control over eating; and physical activity. Results: Weight outcome measures were defined as percentage of excess BMI loss (%EBMIL) and successful weight loss (&ge; 50% EBMIL). Higher distress was associated with poorer %EBMIL, and higher level of physical activity was associated with greater %EBMIL. Decreased cognitive-affective symptoms and increased somatic symptoms of depression were associated with a higher probability of successful weight loss. Increased somatic complaints predicted greater %EBMIL unless those symptoms were associated with higher sedentary behavior. Conclusions: Consistent with hypotheses, preoperative depressive symptoms and binge eating disorder did not predict weight loss. Aspects of all three postoperative domains were associated with weight outcomes. Future research should explore the relations among these psychological and behavioral factors and weight loss over a longer follow-up period.</p>DissertationSurwit, Richard2014Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/9074
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
bariatric surgery
gastric bypass
obesity
predictors of weight loss
psychological
surgical success
spellingShingle Psychology
bariatric surgery
gastric bypass
obesity
predictors of weight loss
psychological
surgical success
Martinez, Erin Elena
Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
description <p>Background: Bariatric surgery produces marked weight loss and improvement in comorbid health conditions among individuals with Class II or Class III obesity (Class I = 30.0 &le; BMI &le; 34.9kg/m2; Class II = 35.0 &le; BMI &ge; 39.9kg/m2; Class III = BMI &ge; 40 kg/m2). However, suboptimal weight outcomes occur in a significant minority of patients. Evidence suggests that psychological and behavioral factors might affect weight loss, but most of the literature has focused on preoperative factors, with mixed results. The current study tested the hypothesis that postoperative depressive symptoms, eating behaviors, and lower levels of physical activity would be associated with poorer weight loss outcomes. Method: Preoperative data were obtained from an extant clinical database, and postoperative data were collected via a mail or online questionnaire in a sample of 141 female Roux-en-y gastric bypass (RYGB) patients at an average of 16.80 (SD=2.20) months post-surgery. Self-report measures assessed cognitive-affective and somatic symptoms of depression; binge eating, grazing, night eating, distress about overeating or loss of control over eating; and physical activity. Results: Weight outcome measures were defined as percentage of excess BMI loss (%EBMIL) and successful weight loss (&ge; 50% EBMIL). Higher distress was associated with poorer %EBMIL, and higher level of physical activity was associated with greater %EBMIL. Decreased cognitive-affective symptoms and increased somatic symptoms of depression were associated with a higher probability of successful weight loss. Increased somatic complaints predicted greater %EBMIL unless those symptoms were associated with higher sedentary behavior. Conclusions: Consistent with hypotheses, preoperative depressive symptoms and binge eating disorder did not predict weight loss. Aspects of all three postoperative domains were associated with weight outcomes. Future research should explore the relations among these psychological and behavioral factors and weight loss over a longer follow-up period.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Surwit, Richard
author_facet Surwit, Richard
Martinez, Erin Elena
author Martinez, Erin Elena
author_sort Martinez, Erin Elena
title Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
title_short Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
title_full Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
title_fullStr Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
title_full_unstemmed Postoperative Depression, Eating Behaviors, and Physical Activity as Indicators of Weight Loss in Gastric Bypass Patients
title_sort postoperative depression, eating behaviors, and physical activity as indicators of weight loss in gastric bypass patients
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9074
work_keys_str_mv AT martinezerinelena postoperativedepressioneatingbehaviorsandphysicalactivityasindicatorsofweightlossingastricbypasspatients
_version_ 1716711015313309696