| Literature DB >> 20180039 |
Masha Livhits1, Cheryl Mercado, Irina Yermilov, Janak A Parikh, Erik Dutson, Amir Mehran, Clifford Y Ko, Melinda Maggard Gibbons.
Abstract
The contribution of physical activity on the degree of weight loss following bariatric surgery is unclear. To determine impact of exercise on postoperative weight loss. Medline search (1988-2009) was completed using MeSH terms including bariatric procedures and a spectrum of patient factors with potential relationship to weight loss outcomes. Of the 934 screened articles, 14 reported on exercise and weight loss outcomes. The most commonly used instruments to measure activity level were the Baecke Physical Activity Questionnaire, the International Physical Activity Questionnaire, and a variety of self-made questionnaires. The definition of an active patient varied but generally required a minimum of 30 min of exercise at least 3 days per week. Thirteen articles reported on exercise and degree of postoperative weight loss (n = 4,108 patients). Eleven articles found a positive association of exercise on postoperative weight loss, and two did not. Meta-analysis of three studies revealed a significant increase in 1-year postoperative weight loss (mean difference = 4.2% total body mass index (BMI) loss, 95% confidence interval (CI; 0.26-8.11)) for patients who exercise postoperatively. Exercise following bariatric surgery appears to be associated with a greater weight loss of over 4% of BMI. While a causal relationship cannot be established with observational data, this finding supports the continued efforts to encourage and support patients' involvement in post-surgery exercise. Further research is necessary to determine the recommended activity guidelines for this patient population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20180039 PMCID: PMC2850994 DOI: 10.1007/s11695-010-0096-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obes Surg ISSN: 0960-8923 Impact factor: 4.129
Fig. 1Flow diagram of included and excluded studies for review
Baseline characteristics of studies included in the review
| Author (year) | Study design | Operation | Number | MeanaAge, years (SD) | Gender (% female) | Baseline BMI (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Larsen [ | Retrospective cohort | Lap RYGB | 157 | 40 (7.9) | 91.7 | 45.5 (5.7) |
| Bueter [ | Retrospective cohort | Lap RYGB | 85 | 40 | 81 | 49 |
| Colles [ | Prospective cohort | Lap RYGB | 129 | 45.2 (11.5) | 80 | 44.3 (6.8) |
| Cook [ | Retrospective cohort | RYGBa | 100 | – | 95 | – |
| Bond [ | Retrospective cohort | RYGBa | 1,585 | 40.4 (10) | 83 | 49.8 (7.4) |
| Latner [ | Retrospective cohort | RYGBa | 65 | 39.5 | 100 | 54.1 (10.2) |
| Silver [ | Retrospective cohort | RYGBa | 140 | 45.2 (9.9) | 89 | 49.8 (7.9) |
| Wolfe [ | Retrospective cohort | RYGBa | 194 | 42.1 (10.4) | 88 | M: 58.3 (12.4) |
| F: 51.8 (10.7) | ||||||
| Bond [ | Prospective cohort | RYGBa | 39c | 46 (10)c | 90c | 50.5 (8.4)c |
| 83 | 43.7 (11.1) | 80 | 49.8 (7) | |||
| 68 | 41.5 (10.7) | 82 | 49.8 (8.7) | |||
| Chevallier [ | Prospective cohort | LAGB | 1,236 | – | – | – |
| Dixon [ | Randomized control trial | LAGB | 30 | 46.6 (7.4) | 50 | 37 (2.7) |
| Medical therapy | 30 | 47.1 (8.7) | 57 | 37.2 (2.5) | ||
| Hernandez-Estefania [ | Prospective cohort | VBG | 67 | 20–60b | 84 | 47.5 (7.7) |
| Metcalf [ | Retrospective cohort | Duodenal switch | 100 | 27–63b | 86 | – |
RYGB roux-en-Y gastric bypass, lap laparoscopic, VBG vertical-banded gastroplasty, LAGB laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding, M males, F females
aNot stated if laparoscopic or open technique
bAge range (no means or standard deviations included in article)
cData listed in order of groups (preoperative/postoperative): inactive/inactive, inactive/active, active/active
Description of exercise instruments
| Author | Validated instrument | Self-made instrument | Definition of active |
|---|---|---|---|
| Larsen [ | Sport Index of the Baecke Questionnaire, Physical Exercise Belief Questionnaire (perceived benefits and barriers of exercise) | – | – |
| Bueter [ | – | Questionnaire about physical activity | Endurance sports >30 min, >3 times/week |
| Colles [ | Physical Component Score SF-36, Baecke Physical Activity Questionnaire | Presence of 11 possible barriers to physical activity; self-recorded pedometer step counts | – |
| Cook [ | – | Questionnaire about exercise | >40 min, ≥4 times/week |
| Bond [ | – | Self-reported physical activity at any office visit | Any activity |
| Latner [ | – | Self-reported exercise frequency | ≥20 min/week |
| Silver [ | Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Questionnaires (dietary and physical activity practices) | Type, frequency, and duration of physical activities | – |
| Wolfe [ | – | Frequency, length, and type of exercise during 3 months prior to surgery and in past 3 months; match of current exercise level to preoperative expectations about exercise. | – |
| Bond [ | International Physical Activity Questionnaire short form pre- and post-op | – | ≥200 min/week |
| Chevallier [ | – | Recovery or improvement of physical activity | Yes (recovery or improvement) |
| Dixon [ | – | Self-report of planned physical activity | >30 min, >3 times/week |
| Hernandez-Estefania [ | – | Self-reported physical activity | >30 min walking/day |
| Metcalf [ | – | Self reported exercise | >30 min, ≥3 times/week |
Association of exercise on postoperative weight loss
| Author | F/U (mo) | Groups (N) | Mean weight loss | Results (correlation) | Association |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colles [ | 12 | – (129) | 50 (20.7)b | Baecke Leisure Index Score and % weight loss ( | Positive |
| Chevallier [ | 12 | Inactive (619) | 23.8%c | Post-op physical activity and chance of >50% excess weight loss (OR 2.3**) | Positive |
| Active (303) | 42%*** | ||||
| Hernandez-Estefania [ | 12 | Inactive | 12.5d | – | Positive |
| Active (67) | 16.5*** | ||||
| Cook [ | 12 | Success | 28–92 kg | Post-op exercise and successful weight loss | Positive |
| Failure (100) | 22–87 kg | ||||
| Metcalf [ | 12 | Exercise (50) | 58% | No difference in BMI between exercisers and non-exercisers | Inconclusive |
| No exercise (50) | 57%f | ||||
| Bond [ | 12 | Inact/inacta (39) | 63.1 (16.6)b | Change in physical activity and weight loss ( | Positive |
| Inact/act (83) | 71.5 (15.5) | ||||
| Act/Act (68) | 69.8 (14.1)* | ||||
| Latner [ | 16 | – (65) | 71%e | Post-op exercise frequency and BMI change ( | Positive |
| Wolfe [ | 20 | – (194) | – | Increase in exercise and BMI change ( | Positive |
| Bond [ | 24 | Sedentary (106) | 63.9 (19.5) b | – | Positive |
| Active (1,479) | 68.2 (17.4)** | ||||
| Silver [ | 24 | – (140) | 55.8 (15.2) kg | Post-op physical activity (min/episode) and post-op BMI (OR = −.15*) | Positive |
| Dixon [ | 24 | Inactive (30) | 7.8 (12.3) kg | Average times participants reported performing planned physical activity each week and weight loss ( | Positive |
| Active (30) | 13.9 (10.9) kg* | ||||
| Larsen [ | 24 | – (157) | 10.2d | No association between exercise and weight outcome | No association |
| Bueter [ | 27 | – (85) | 43.2b | Post-op exercise and successful weight loss (%EWL >50 with no band removal) (RR 4.2**) | Positive |
WL weight loss, OR odds ratio, RR relative risk; inact inactive, act active
*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001
aPreoperative/postoperative
b%EWL
c% patients with EWL > 50%
dBMI points lost
eEWL based on BMI change
fTotal % BMI change
Fig. 2Meta-analyses of postoperative weight loss at 12 months for exercise versus no exercise groups. Forest plots of random-effects meta-analyses of % total BMI loss at 12 months, separately for exercise versus no exercise groups