International Journal of Endocrinology (Jan 2014)

Bariatric Endocrinology: Principles of Medical Practice

  • J. Michael Gonzalez-Campoy,
  • Bruce Richardson,
  • Conor Richardson,
  • David Gonzalez-Cameron,
  • Ayesha Ebrahim,
  • Pamela Strobel,
  • Tiphani Martinez,
  • Beth Blaha,
  • Maria Ransom,
  • Jessica Quinonez-Weislow,
  • Andrea Pierson,
  • Miguel Gonzalez Ahumada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/917813
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

Read online

Obesity, is a chronic, biological, preventable, and treatable disease. The accumulation of fat mass causes physical changes (adiposity), metabolic and hormonal changes due to adipose tissue dysfunction (adiposopathy), and psychological changes. Bariatric endocrinology was conceived from the need to address the neuro-endocrinological derangements that are associated with adiposopathy, and from the need to broaden the scope of the management of its complications. In addition to the well-established metabolic complications of overweight and obesity, adiposopathy leads to hyperinsulinemia, hyperleptinemia, hypoadiponectinemia, dysregulation of gut peptides including GLP-1 and ghrelin, the development of an inflammatory milieu, and the strong risk of vascular disease. Therapy for adiposopathy hinges on effectively lowering the ratio of orexigenic to anorexigenic signals reaching the the hypothalamus and other relevant brain regions, favoring a lower caloric intake. Adiposopathy, overweight and obesity should be treated indefinitely with the specific aims to reduce fat mass for the adiposity complications, and to normalize adipose tissue function for the adiposopathic complications. This paper defines the principles of medical practice in bariatric endocrinology—the treatment of overweight and obesity as means to treat adiposopathy and its accompanying metabolic and hormonal derangements.