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  #1   ^
Old Mon, Apr-28-03, 11:59
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Plan: Atkins
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Default "Epilepsy drug may be weight-loss aid"

Epilepsy drug may be weight-loss aid

Results promising, say researchers

Tuesday, April 8, 2003 Posted: 12:30 PM EDT (1630 GMT)

link to article

CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- An epilepsy drug combined with a reduced-calorie diet may result in significant weight loss for obese adults, according to one of several obesity studies in this week's Journal of the American Medical Association.

The epilepsy drug research was prompted by reports of unintentional weight loss in epilepsy patients using zonisamide to prevent seizures.

In the Duke University study, participants who took zonisamide daily for 16 weeks lost an average of nearly 13 pounds, compared with about 2 pounds in patients given dummy pills.

Both groups also ate 500 fewer calories daily in a diet monitored by a dietitian, and were encouraged to increase their activity levels. Patients were mostly women, aged 21 to 50, and weighed over 200 pounds on average.

The study was small -- just 60 patients -- and the results are preliminary, but they suggest the drug could be a promising addition to efforts to control the nation's obesity epidemic, according to a research team led by Duke's Dr. Kishore Gadde.

Some 30 percent of U.S. adults are obese and 60 percent are overweight.

The study was funded by Elan Biopharmaceuticals, makers of zonisamide, which is sold under the brand name Zonegran.

Also in Wednesday's JAMA:

• A Harvard University study of more than 50,000 women bolsters the link between sedentary lifestyles and obesity, finding a 23 percent increased risk of obesity and a 14 percent increased risk of diabetes for every two hours of television watched daily.

By contrast, watching less than 10 hours of TV weekly and engaging in brisk walking at least half an hour daily reduced the obesity and diabetes risks by 30 percent and 43 percent respectively.

• The prescription diet drug Meridia helped adolescents lose weight when combined with behavior therapy, but also was linked with increases in pulse rate and blood pressure that have been found in adults.

The research team led by Dr. Robert Berkowitz of the University of Pennsylvania said the drug should only be used on an experimental basis in adolescents and children "until more safety and efficacy data are available."

• A research review concluded that any success with low-carbohydrate regimens including the Atkins diet results primarily from restricting calories, not just reducing carbohydrates.

But evidence on safety and efficacy is insufficient to recommend low-carbohydrate diets, especially for longer than three months or for people older than age 50, said lead researcher Dr. Dena Bravata of Stanford University.

In the zonisamide study, the researchers said "the precise mechanism is not known" for how the drug stimulates weight loss.

Fatigue was the only side effect reported more frequently in the zonisamide patients than in the placebo group. How it would stack up against drugs approved for weight loss is not known.
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  #2   ^
Old Mon, Apr-28-03, 16:22
acohn's Avatar
acohn acohn is offline
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Posts: 511
 
Plan: PP
Stats: 210/210/160 Male 5' 7"
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gotbeer,

How do you know where to look for all this stuff? It's simply amazing.

Quote:
...the drug could be a promising addition to efforts to control the nation's obesity epidemic...


Hmmm, let's do some math...

Number of Americans with epilepsy: 1.5 to 3.5 million (1)(2)
Percentage of obese Americans: 27-33%
Number of Americans with epilepsy who are obese: 405,000 to 1.16 million

I'm no business whiz, but looks like a small opportunity to me.


Too bad the article authors conveniently repeated the myth about the reasons for the success of LC diets.

(1)"Epilepsy research targets brain chatter" The Vanderbilt Medical Center Reporter, http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/reporter/?ID=2168.

(2)Hauser WA, Hesdorffer DC: Epilepsy: Frequency, Causes, and Consequences. New York City, Demos, 1990

Last edited by acohn : Mon, Apr-28-03 at 16:43.
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  #3   ^
Old Mon, Apr-28-03, 16:29
tamarian's Avatar
tamarian tamarian is offline
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Posts: 19,572
 
Plan: Atkins/PP/BFL
Stats: 400/223/200 Male 5 ft 11
BF:37%/17%/12%
Progress: 89%
Location: Ottawa, ON
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by acohn
gotbeer,

Where do you find all this stuff? It's simply amazing.

Too bad the article authors conveniently repeated the myth about the reasons for the success of LC diets.


Gotbeer always posts the link to the original , just scroll to the top, and click the link just below the title.

Wa'il
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  #4   ^
Old Mon, Apr-28-03, 18:00
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Posts: 2,889
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 280/203/200 Male 69 inches
BF:
Progress: 96%
Location: Dallas, TX, USA
Default

acohn - I'm a serious news junkie - I hit several sites daily looking for stuff (Atkin's included).

I also subscribe to several publications which allow me special privileges on certain sites.

Most productive sites for Atkins articles are (in rough order):

http://Google.com - expecially their "news" option
http://CNN.con
http://www.ScienceNews.Org
http://www.sciam.com
http://www.nytimes.com
http://www.washingtonpost.com
http://www.salon.com
http://slate.msn.com ("In Other Magazines" section)

...etc, etc...
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  #5   ^
Old Tue, Apr-29-03, 14:12
acohn's Avatar
acohn acohn is offline
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Posts: 511
 
Plan: PP
Stats: 210/210/160 Male 5' 7"
BF:31%/31%/24%
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I genuflect in your direction, gotbeer; that's an impressive amount of daily data gathering.

I'm beginning to feel like the members of this board could and should form a Media Misinformation Response Team. They/we'd send messages to the authors of dis/misinformation and their bosses, letting at least a couple layers of management know that we insist on accurate reporting.
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