7 research outputs found
Nutrition and physical activity programs for obesity treatment (PRONAF study): methodological approach of the project
The Impact of Obesity in the Workplace: a Review of Contributing Factors, Consequences and Potential Solutions
Impact of Weight Loss on the Metabolic Syndrome
Objective:To evaluate the effects of weight loss on the risk of having metabolic syndrome after 1 year of treatment with lifestyle modification alone, pharmacotherapy alone (sibutramine) or the combination of the two.
Design:Randomized, controlled, 1-year clinical trial.
Patients:One hundred and eighty women and 44 men, 18–65 years of age, with a body mass index of 30–45 kg/m2, free of uncontrolled hypertension or type 1 or 2 diabetes.
Intervention:Fifteen milligrams of sibutramine per day alone, lifestyle modification counseling alone, sibutramine plus lifestyle modification counseling or sibutramine plus brief lifestyle modification counseling.
Measurements:The metabolic syndrome, as defined by the Adult Treatment Panel III.
Results: Before treatment, 34.8% of the participants had the metabolic syndrome. Metabolic syndrome was more prevalent in Caucasians than African Americans (42.5 vs 20.3%; P44 years) than younger (less than or equal to44 years) participants (47.5 vs 20.8%; PConclusions: The metabolic syndrome was prevalent in over one-third of obese individuals who sought weight loss treatment, and the prevalence differed by age, sex and ethnicity. Moderate weight loss markedly reduced the odds of metabolic syndrome in this sample