Study reveals that weight loss surgery might improve breathing issues

CT, which is an imaging technology that provides detailed photos of lungs and airways, has great potential to understand the impact of obesity on the respiratory system

The Bariatric surgery and also weight loss helps in improving the issues regarding breathing, as revealed by researchers. The effects that obesity has on the respiratory system include increased respiratory work along with the weakness in airway resistance and respiratory muscle strength which all adds on to cause restrictive pulmonary function impairment.

CT, which is an imaging technology providing detailed photos of lungs and airways, has great potential to understand the impact of obesity on the respiratory system. However, until now there have been very few CT studies on this matter.

CT can be effective

OBESITY
Going by present trends, by 2025 18% of the world's men and 21% of women will be obese, the study predicts. REUTERS

"For the first time, this study has demonstrated changes in the CT morphology of large and small airways that improve when individuals lose weight. These features correlate with an improvement in patient symptoms," said study lead author Susan J. Copley from Hammersmith Hospital in London.

For the study, published in the journal Radiology, the research team evaluated changes in the respiratory systems of 51 obese individuals who underwent bariatric surgery, a treatment for obese patients who haven't responded to other weight loss approaches.

The procedure reduces the size of the stomach. All participants lost weight post-surgery with a mean body mass index decrease of 10.5 kg/m2. The researchers used CT to measure the size and shape of the trachea and assessed air trapping, a phenomenon in which excess air remains in the lungs after exhaling, resulting in a reduction in lung function.

Air trapping is an indirect sign of obstruction

Air trapping is an indirect sign of obstruction in the small airways of the lung. When the researchers compared results at baseline and six months after Bariatric surgery, they found that surgery and weight loss were associated with morphological, or structural, changes to the lung and trachea.

Post-surgery CT showed reductions in air trapping and a lower incidence of tracheal collapse. Change in the extent of CT air trapping was the strongest predictor of improvement in dyspnea, or shortness of breath, the study said.

The results suggest that there may be a reversible element of small airway inflammation related to obesity and that reversal of this inflammation correlates with improvement in symptoms. The findings also point to CT as a potential marker of this inflammation. "CT is a useful morphological marker to demonstrate subtle changes which are not easily assessed by lung function alone," Copley said.

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