CREDIT: Sebastian Kaulitzki | Dreamstime |
For
people who wish they could satisfy their food cravings without wearing them on
their waistlines, a new device claims to have the answer, though experts are
critical of it.
The
gadget, called AspireAssist, sucks food out of the stomach before it has a
chance to be absorbed by the body. The patient requires a procedure that places
a tube in the stomach that connects to a port outside of the body. (The
procedure does not require general anesthesia, although people are sedated with
medication.) About 20 minutes after eating, people attach a device to the port,
and "aspirate" the food they have eaten — in other words, empty the
contents of their stomach. "Because aspiration only removes a third of the
food, the body still receives the calories it needs to function," the
company, Aspire Bariatrics, writes on its website.
In a
U.S. trial, obese individuals who used the device lost more than 45 pounds
during the first year, the company says. While AspireAssist is available in
some parts of Europe, it is still undergoing trials in the United States, and
has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, according to ABC
news.
However,
experts have many concerns about the device. Studies testing the device have
been small and not rigorous in design, and researchers don’t yet know whether
people who use it will end up healthier in the long term, said Dr. Pieter
Cohen, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and a
general internist at Cambridge Health Alliance. "How do we know this is
not the equivalent of bulimia?" Cohen said.
Experts
also expressed concern about the device removing the good components of food
the body needs, along with the bad. "It seems so extreme," Katherine
Tallmadge, the author of "Diet Simple" (LifeLine Press, 2011), told
MyHealthNewsDaily. "We eat because our body needs nutrients. If it could
selectivity suck out the junk food, then it might have some value. But it just
indiscriminately sucks out a third of what you're eating."
Gastric
bypass surgery also reduces calories absorbed from food by surgically rerouting
the gut so that food bypasses a portion of the stomach and the small intestine.
However, some experts said gastric bypass surgery has an advantage in that it
also quells hunger — it lowers levels of the hunger hormone ghrelin — while
AspireAssist does not appear to have this function. "I don’t see how this gets around the
hunger issue," Cohen said.
A
patient interviewed by ABC News said he did not feel hungry with the device
because he was able to keep some of what he ate in his stomach. The device also
has the potential for abuse — if people empty out most of the contents of their
stomach, they could become malnourished, Cohen said. Studies will need to
carefully test the device before we know if it will have any benefit, Cohen
said.
Source: Live Science
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