The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Device helps obese people shed weight

Health: Diabetes patients lose more than 2st with alternativ­e to surgery

- BY JANE KIRBY

A device that helps obese people with Type 2 diabetes shed more than 2st on average should be rolled out across the NHS, experts say.

The Endobarrie­r is a reversible treatment that provides people with an alternativ­e to drastic gastric bypass surgery.

Patients can be fitted with the thin plastic sleeve via their mouth in less than an hour while under anaestheti­c.

The Endobarrie­r lines the first 60cm of the small intestine, preventing the body from digesting food in this area and causing it to be absorbed further down the intestine. Cutting out the first part of digestion means that people feel full after just a small meal.

The idea is similar to having a gastric bypass, but is far less invasive, less risky, less expensive and can be removed, usually after a year.

A new study presented at the European Associatio­n for the Study of Diabetes annual meeting in Lisbon has found that the device is a safe and effective treatment. Dr Robert Ryder and colleagues from City Hospital, Birmingham, have so far implanted the Endobarrie­r in 50 patients as part of an NHS trial.

Results for the first 31 patients, who have now had their device removed, show it helped them lose weight and improved their health.

On average, the patients lost 15 kg (2st 5lb), had improved blood sugar control, lower blood pressure and less liver fat.

Those on insulin were able to reduce their dose from 100 units to 30 per day. All had suffered from Type 2 diabetes for an average of 13 years.

“It’s similar to having a gastric bypass but is far less invasive”

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