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Jejunoileal bypass surgery or sham surgery was performed in female rats made obese with ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) knife cuts, and in lean control rats. After bypass surgery, the VMH rats underate and lost weight until they reached the body weight of the control sham rats, and they then maintained their weight at control levels. Bypass surgery in lean rats produced much smaller reductions in food intake and body weight. Both bypass groups initially consumed less of a sucrose solution and milk diet during 1 h/day tests, but their intakes returned to near normal levels during the second postoperative month. Reconnection of the intestinal tract in the VMH-bypass rats led to renewed hyperphagia and return to obese body weights. A second experiment revealed that bypass surgery reduces food intake and body weight in genetically obese (fatty) rats, but this effect is not as pronounced as that displayed by VMH rats. These results confirm recent clinical observations that reduced appetite and caloric intake are the major causes of the weight loss produced by intestinal bypass surgery.
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A. D. Strader, T. P. Vahl, R. J. Jandacek, S. C. Woods, D. A. D'Alessio, and R. J. Seeley Weight loss through ileal transposition is accompanied by increased ileal hormone secretion and synthesis in rats Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, February 1, 2005; 288(2): E447 - E453. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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