Obesity pills work best with dieting, exercise

andtckrtoo

Cathlete
Well, geez, eating 1500 calories a day, exercise... Now why didn't WE think of that???


From MSNBC http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10070407/


BOSTON - There's no free lunch with diet pills, new research concludes: They work much better accompanied by the hard work of dieting and exercise.

The study backed by the National Institutes of Health is the biggest and best yet to demonstrate why obese people should adopt healthy habits, even if they take weight-loss drugs, researchers said.

"If you pit this medication against your favorite all-you-can-eat buffet, the ... buffet is going to win nine out of 10 times. So it's important you try to modify eating habits," advised University of Pennsylvania psychologist Thomas Wadden, who led the study published Thursday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Medical guidelines have recommended that obese patients also change eating and exercise habits since doctors first began prescribing today's long-term weight-loss medicines in the late 1990s. Still, many patients fail or ignore the advice.

Yet in the one-year study, the most successful patients took the weight-loss drug Meridia along with 30 sessions of group counseling that promoted a 1,500-calorie daily diet and half-hour walks on most days. It was especially effective when patients recorded how much they ate each day.

Obese people who took pills alone typically lost 11 pounds (5 kilograms) in the study. When they added the full program promoting lifestyle changes, they lost 27 pounds (12.2 kilograms) — more than twice as much.

A third group took the drug with brief doctor's counseling, and a fourth underwent only group counseling. Within five months, those two groups lost a bit more weight than the group that only took the drug, but all three of these groups were roughly equal after a year.

It is unclear how well the study patients will keep off their lost weight in future years. Researchers also hope that future studies will clarify whether doctors can offer better counseling to approximate the results of extended group sessions. Such in-office sessions would be faster and cheaper.


Dr. Samuel Klein, an obesity expert at Washington University in St. Louis, said the study nonetheless establishes the importance of coupling dieting and exercise with drug therapy in obese patients. Otherwise, he warned, "you expose them to all the risks and all the costs of the medication — without the full benefits."

While acknowledging that lifestyle changes are difficult, specialists widely prefer them for patients who can shed pounds that way. The side effects of Abbott Laboratories' Meridia, known chemically as sibutramine, include higher heart rate and blood pressure in some patients.

Dr. Susan Yanovski, at the National Institutes of Health, warned in an accompanying editorial that obesity medicines should undergo especially careful scrutiny for safety, since they are often misused by patients who are not obese.

Roche's Xenical, or orlistat, is the other federally approved weight-loss medication for extended use. Wadden has consulted or done other work for both Abbott and Roche, and some of his research colleagues also disclosed industry connections.

Another study in Thursday's journal seemed to strengthen prospects for another weight-loss medication that Sanofi-Aventis hopes to market.

The drug, rimonabant, lowered a variety of heart-risk markers in heavy patients who had unhealthy levels of cholesterol and fats in their blood. Sanofi-Aventis funded the study.

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
Im not so sure about these pills.I have taken them in the meantime with little success but I think they are mostly mind games.If you eat clean,exercise and are overweight you are going to lose weight with that combination alone.I think people feel more motivated when they combine all three...just my thoughts.
Lori:)
 
It's interesting that this came out this week. I was at Barnes & Noble on Sunday night & read a small article (less than a column) in one of the fitness mags (I can't remember for the life of me) about Meridia. It said that the evidence that the pill actually works is SLIM and that there are groups trying to get the FDA to pull it because there have been several deaths linked to its use in Europe (only 1 or 2 here in the US).

So, here's the thing...if people taking Meridia, with a low cal diet and exercise lost an average of 26 lbs in a year, what's the point? A person not taking the drug, low cal diet and exercise cold lose the same amount if faithful.
 
That's exactly what I was thinking. If a person has to have a 1500 calorie diet and exercise for these pills to work, are they not better off skipping the pills and the possible side affects (no one really knows what these things do long term) and simply doing the 1500 calorie diet and exercising?

This is actually near and dear to my heart. My mom has fought her weight all her life (and passed it down to me *sighs*), and she took Phen Phen and other diet pills. She also took a Vioxx copy. She now has a fast acting form of liver cancer. She does not drink, except in very moderate amounts - a glass of wine every 3 or 4 weeks) nor did she ever do drugs, nor does she have hepititis C - which are what 90% of the people have who have this form of cancer. I think it's the drugs she took - the legal drugs that were prescribed to her. I put as few of these things in my body as possible.
 
I don't know about pills. I and probably most of you have probably tried them.
I get nervous and jittery and feel like crap.Most of them , especially with chromium have given me a headache.
The starch blockers bloat you and give you gas and I don't feel work.
I say spend the money on more lean meats and fruits and veggies.
Oh and what about cortisol.
I think this one is a joke.
Good gimmic though.
Everyone wants to loose belly fat.
Anne
 
I think that the issue is that people who are taking these pills generally are trying to lose weight without having to modify eating habits and include exercise. Come on, how many people do you know that took this drug or that and were so amazd how easy it was to lose weight without changing a thing!

True story: I had a friend that was taking some diet pill (honestly, I don't recall which one) and she was telling me all about her success. I was really glad for her until she said "yeah, now when we go to McDonalds, I can barely eat the whole Big Mac before I am full!" Very delicately, I asked her how often she still goes to places like McD and it was just as regularly as before. In fact, after further discussion, I found out that she was doing *nothing* differently at all. Today she is 50 + pounds MORE overweight.

....some good ol' hard work is what it takes to lose weight adn be healthy. Even if you can suppress your appetite, boost your metabolism, or anything else these drugs promise, if you eat like hell, you are not being good to your body.
 
I didn't read the article, because I have no interest in taking pills to lose weight or do anything, but it sounds almost like the disclaimer they put in very small print at the bottom of adds for weight-loss gizmos or ab machines that are supposed to help you lose weight (!): results obtained by following a diet and addiing exercise to the program.

Seems to me you could get good results with sugar pills, diet and exercise!
 

Our Newsletter

Get awesome content delivered straight to your inbox.

Top