| Literature DB >> 26059334 |
Patrick H Alizai1, Maren K Akkerman2, Daniel Kaemmer3, Florian Ulmer4, Christian D Klink5, Sabine Ernst6, Klaus Mathiak7, Ulf P Neumann8, Volker Perlitz9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery has gained increasing relevance due to the dramatic rise in morbid obesity prevalence. A sound body of scientific literature demonstrates positive long-term outcome of bariatric surgery in decreasing mental and physical health morbidity. Still, there is a need for a manageable presurgical screening to assess major mental disorders. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency of common psychiatric syndromes in bariatric surgery candidates using a computerized version of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26059334 PMCID: PMC4460674 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-015-0278-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Sociodemographic data
| Participants | All ( | Women ( | Men ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 42.2 (±10.7) | 41.2 (±11.1) | 44.0 (±9.6) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 49.3 (±8.4) | 49.1 (±8.5) | 49.8 (±8.4) |
| Education | |||
| No graduation | 5 (3.1 %) | 4 (3.9 %) | 1 (1.8 %) |
| Secondary school | 97 (61.0 %) | 60 (57.7 %) | 37 (67.3 %) |
| High school | 40 (25.2 %) | 31 (29.8 %) | 9 (16.4 %) |
| University | 17 (10.7 %) | 9 (8.7 %) | 8 (14.6 %) |
| Marital Status | |||
| Single | 36 (22.6 %) | 25 (24.0 %) | 11 (20.0 %) |
| Partnership | 28 (17.6 %) | 18 (17.3 %) | 10 (18.2 %) |
| Married | 80 (50.3 %) | 52 (50.0 %) | 28 (50.9 %) |
| Divorced | 14 (8.8 %) | 8 (7.7 %) | 6 (10.9 %) |
| Widowed | 1 (0.6 %) | 1 (1.0 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Employment | |||
| Unemployed | 62 (39.0 %) | 38 (36.5 %) | 24 (43.6 %) |
| Worker | 13 (8.2 %) | 6 (5.8 %) | 7 (12.7 %) |
| Employee | 54 (34.0 %) | 38 (36.5 %) | 16 (29.1 %) |
| Self-employed | 7 (4.4 %) | 6 (5.8 %) | 1 (1.8 %) |
| Early Retired | 23 (14.5 %) | 16 (15.4 %) | 7 (12.7 %) |
Fig. 1Distribution of psychiatric syndromes: no disorder (15.7 %), a single disorder (17.0 %), two (17.0 %), three (13.2 %), four or more than four psychiatric syndromes (37.1 %). About half of the patients (50.3 %) applying for bariatric surgery exhibited mental health problems in at least three areas
Gender-specific distribution of psychiatric syndromes
| Syndrome | All | Women ( | Men ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ||||
| Somatic symptom burden | 93 (58.5 %) | 68 (65.4 %) | 25 (45.5 %) | 0.015* |
| Major depressive syndrome | 42 (26.4 %) | 29 (27.9 %) | 13 (23.6 %) | 0.563* |
| Other depressive disorder | 71 (44.7 %) | 50 (48.1 %) | 21 (38.2 %) | 0.233* |
| Panic disorder | 29 (18.2 %) | 21 (20.2 %) | 8 (14.6 %) | 0.381* |
| Anxiety disorder | 72 (45.3 %) | 56 (53.9 %) | 16 (29.1 %) | 0.003* |
| Bulimia nervosa | 17 (10.7 %) | 13 (12.5 %) | 4 (7.3 %) | 0.310* |
| Binge eating disorder | 33 (20.8 %) | 25 (24.0 %) | 8 (14.6 %) | 0.160* |
| Alcohol syndrome | 10 (6.3 %) | 4 (3.9 %) | 6 (10.9 %) | 0.081* |
| Median number | 2 (IQR = 3) | 3 (IQR = 3) | 1 (IQR = 2) | 0.007a |
a Wilcoxon signed-rank test
* Chi-square test
Employment status and distribution of psychiatric syndromes
| Syndrome | All | Employed | Unemployed |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 159) | (n = 74) | (n = 85) | ||
| Somatic symptom burden | 93 (58.5 %) | 36 (48.6 %) | 57 (67.1 %) | 0.0188* |
| Major depressive syndrome | 42 (26.4 %) | 15 (20.3 %) | 27 (31.8 %) | 0.1010* |
| Other depressive disorder | 71 (44.7 %) | 26 (35.1 %) | 45 (52.9 %) | 0.0243* |
| Panic disorder | 29 (18.2 %) | 8 (10.8 %) | 21 (24.7 %) | 0.0236* |
| Anxiety disorder | 72 (45.3 %) | 32 (43.2 %) | 40 (47.1 %) | 0.6297* |
| Bulimia nervosa | 17 (10.7 %) | 10 (13.5 %) | 7 (8.2 %) | 0.2827* |
| Binge eating disorder | 33 (20.8 %) | 16 (21.6 %) | 17 (20.0 %) | 0.8014* |
| Alcohol syndrome | 10 (6.3 %) | 5 (6.8 %) | 5 (5.9 %) | 1.000b |
| Median number | 2 (IQR = 3) | 2 (IQR = 2) | 2 (IQR = 3) | 0.0345a |
Employed participants and early retirees were subsumed as ‘unemployed’
a Wilcoxon signed-rank test
b Fisher’s exact test
* Chi-square test