Dr Surendra Ugale

Dr Surendra Ugale Dr Surendra Ugale is Chief of Bariatric & Metabolic Surgery, at Kirloskar Hospitals and Asian Bariat of Surgery, at KLE University, Belgaum.

Dr Surendra Ugale is Chief of Bariatric & Metabolic Surgery, at Asian Bariatrics and Kirloskar Hospitals Hyderabad, and its associated centres in Vijayawada, Kolkata, Bhubaneshwar and Siliguri and Visiting Prof. He has been passionate about laparoscopic surgery since 1991, and helped spread it to many parts of India and abroad. His team is the 2nd in the world to start Laparoscopic Ileal Interposition for Type-2 Diabetes in 2008; he also introduced a new scoring system, Diabetes Severity & Remission Score. His work is now especially focused on Metabolic Surgery for Diabetes & Obesity and he is a proctor at national and international centres.

Bariatric Live Operative Webinar on 30th November 2020 at 10:00am with *Dr. Surendra Ugale.Key Highlights for the Event:...
30/11/2020

Bariatric Live Operative Webinar on 30th November 2020 at 10:00am with *Dr. Surendra Ugale.
Key Highlights for the Event:
1) Sleeve Gastrectomy
2) Gastric bypass surgery
-Technique of measuring Bowel length
-- Techniques to close Mesenteric gaps and Petersen's space
--Techniques for secure GI anastomosis
ZOOM Meeting ID: 994 5228 6990
Passcode: 433887

14/06/2019
Rural areas drive increases in global obesityThe global rise in the prevalence of obesity has been seen as an urban prob...
09/05/2019

Rural areas drive increases in global obesity

The global rise in the prevalence of obesity has been seen as an urban problem. A large-scale study challenges this view by showing that weight gain in rural areas is the main factor currently driving the obesity epidemic.

The global problem of overweight and obesity has been seen chiefly as an urban issue, partly because access to food services is much greater and easier in cities than in rural areas. City dwellers have an array of options for purchasing highly processed foods and beverages, which are high in salt, saturated fat and sugar, and which are often termed ‘ultra-processed obesogenic foods’. Many low-income communities in urban areas consume predominantly ultra-processed foods and beverages sold at fast-food and small retail outlets, often because they live in so-called ‘food deserts’ — low-income areas where these are the only available foods.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-01182-x?amp& amp

For more information on Bariatric, Metabolic surgery contact Kirloskar Hospital Ph: 8367719993. Dr Surendra Ugale, is one of the India's best Bariatric and Metabolic surgeon, doing Weight-loss and Diabetes surgeries.. For more info visit us at www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com. For more info visit us at http://www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com/updates/surgeon/u81?utm_source=facebookpage

People with obesity often 'dehumanised', study findsObesity is now very common in most of developed countries. Around on...
15/04/2019

People with obesity often 'dehumanised', study finds

Obesity is now very common in most of developed countries. Around one third of US adults and one quarter of UK adults are now medically defined as having obesity. However, obesity is a complex medical condition driven by genetic, environmental and social factors.
Previous research has suggested that people often hold stigmatising and prejudiced views about obesity.
This new research conducted at the University of Liverpool, led by Dr. Inge Kersbergen and Dr. Eric Robinson examined whether stigmatising views about obesity may be more extreme than previously shown. The research examined whether people believe that individuals with obesity are less evolved and human than those without obesity.
Methods used
As part of a recognised research approach employed in a number of other studies, more than 1500 participants, made up of people from the UK, USA and India, completed online surveys to indicate how evolved they consider different groups of people to be on a scale from 0-100.
The researchers also recorded the BMI of those completing the survey to find out whether blatant dehumanisation of obesity was more common among thinner people and investigated whether blatant dehumanisation predicted support for health policies that discriminate against people because of their body weight.
Results
Participants on average rated people with obesity as 'less evolved' and human than people without obesity. On average, participants placed people with obesity approximately 10 points below people without obesity. Blatant dehumanisation was most common among thinner participants, but was also observed among participants who would be medically classed as being 'overweight' or 'obese'.
People who blatantly dehumanised those with obesity were more likely to support health policies that discriminate against people because of their weight.
Eric Robinson, a Reader at the University of Liverpool, said: "This is some of the first evidence that people with obesity are blatantly dehumanised. This tendency to consider people with obesity as 'less human' reveals the level of obesity stigma.
"It's too common for society to present and talk about obesity in dehumanising ways, using animalistic words to describe problems with food (e.g. 'pigging out') or using images that remove the dignity of people living with obesity. Obesity is a complex problem driven by poverty and with significant genetic, psychological and environmental components. Blatant or subtle dehumanisation of any group is morally wrong and in the context of obesity, what we also know is that the stigma surrounding obesity is actually a barrier to making long-term healthy lifestyle changes."
Inge Kersbergen, now a research fellow at the University of Sheffield, said: "Our results expand on previous literature on obesity stigma by showing that people with obesity are not only disliked and stigmatised, but are explicitly considered to be less human than those without obesity. The fact that levels of dehumanisation were predictive of support for policies that discriminate against people with obesity suggests that dehumanisation may be facilitating further prejudice."

For more information on Bariatric, Metabolic surgery contact Kirloskar Hospital Ph: 8367719993. Dr Surendra Ugale, is one of the india's best Bariatric and Metabolic surgeon, doing Weight-loss and Diabetes surgeries.. For more info visit us at www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com. For more info visit us at http://www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com/updates/ways/u80?utm_source=facebookpage

The disturbing links between too much weight and several types of cancer Smoking has been the No. 1 preventable cause of...
15/04/2019

The disturbing links between too much weight and several types of cancer

Smoking has been the No. 1 preventable cause of cancer for decades and still kills more than 500, 000 people a year in the United States. But obesity is poised to take the top spot, as Americans' waistlines continue to expand while to***co use plummets.
The switch could occur in five or 10 years, said Otis Brawley, a Johns Hopkins oncologist and former chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. The rise in obesity rates could threaten the steady decline in cancer death rates since the early 1990s, he said.

Yet only about half of Americans are aware of the link between excess weight and cancer. And researchers are struggling to answer such fundamental questions as how surplus weight increases the risk of the disease and whether, conversely, losing weight helps prevent cancer or a recurrence.

Being obese and overweight - long implicated in heart disease and diabetes - has been associated in recent years with an increased risk of getting at least 13 types of cancer, including stomach, pancreatic, colorectal and liver malignancies, as well as postmenopausal breast cancer. Researchers at the American Cancer Society say that excess body weight is linked to about 8 percent of all cancers in the United States and about 7 percent of cancer deaths.
Compared with people of normal weight, obese patients are more likely to see their cancer come back and have a lower likelihood of survival. Perhaps most alarming, young people, who as a group are heavier than their parents, are developing weight-related malignancies, including colorectal cancer, at earlier ages than previous generations, experts say.

The precise link between cancer and excess weight isn't known, but researchers are focusing on the "visceral" fat that surrounds internal organs. Rather than being a harmless glob, this fat is a "metabolically active organ" that produces hormones such as estrogen, which is associated with a higher risk of breast and some other cancers, according to the American Institute for Cancer Research, a nonprofit group that focuses on diet, nutrition and cancer.
The fat also secretes proteins that drive insulin levels higher, which may spur cell growth and increase the possibility of cancer. And it can cause chronic inflammation, another risk factor for the disease, according to the group.

"It's a complex interplay of metabolism, inflammation and immunity, " said Jennifer Ligibel, a breast oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. "It creates an environment that is more permissive for cancer."
About 7 in 10 Americans are overweight or obese, according to a 2015 article in JAMA Internal Medicine. People are considered overweight if they have a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29, and obese if they have a BMI of 30 or more.
The proportion of adults who are overweight has remained relatively stable in the past several decades, but the obesity rate has soared. In the early 1960s, almost 11 percent of men and nearly 16 percent of women were obese; in 2016, those percentages were 38 percent and 41 percent, respectively, according to the cancer society.
The risk of cancer rises along with excess weight. "It does appear that the risk is greater the more obese you are, " said Jonathan Wright, a urologist at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. There is a link between being overweight and cancer, "but it is not as strong, " he said.
The type of cancer that is most strongly associated with obesity is endometrial, which develops in the lining of the uterus. Obese and overweight women are two to four times as likely to develop the disease as women of normal weight, and the risk rises with increased weight gain, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Meanwhile, people who are overweight or obese are about twice as likely to develop liver and kidney cancer, and about 1.5 times as likely to develop pancreatic cancer than normal-weight people, according to NIH.
In addition, having too much belly fat - a larger waistline - is linked to an increased risk of colorectal and some other cancers, regardless of body weight, the cancer society said.
Several researchers are running clinical trials to try to prove what many already believe - that losing weight reduces the odds of developing cancer or having a recurrence. There are some indications they may be right - severely obese people who have bariatric surgery, for example, lessen their odds of getting cancer - but much more data is needed.
Carol Massey, who is 59 and was treated for breast cancer two years ago, is enrolled in a nationwide trial designed to see if losing weight makes it less likely breast cancer will come back. She has reduced her calorie intake, stepped up her exercise and gotten regular advice from a health coach based at Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, which is leading the Breast Cancer Weight Loss Study, or BWEL.
To be eligible for the trial, women must have a BMI of 27 or higher. The study, which will enroll about 3, 100 women, will compare Massey's group - which gets supervised weight loss and health-education materials - with a group that receives only the educational materials.
Massey, who lives in Paola, Kansas, said she quickly came to look forward to her coach's calls, which initially were once a week. "We got to be friends, she would ask about my family, " she said. "One time, she even called me when she was on vacation in Cabo San Lucas" in Mexico.
Over time, the 5-foot-8 Massey lost 30 pounds. She is now 150 pounds.
Those are the kind of results Ligibel, the principal investigator, is hoping for. If the study shows that slimming down is associated with reduced recurrence, doctors could prescribe a weight-loss program as standard therapy for breast cancer patients - much as cardiac rehabilitation is urged for heart-attack patients. That could pave the way for insurance coverage.
Gail Folloder joined a 16-week program at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center for heavier women at high risk of breast cancer because both of her parents had had cancer and she wanted to prevent it. The 67-year-old Houston resident underwent "hunger training, " which uses continuous glucose monitoring to show participants when they need fuel and urges them to limit their eating to those times.
"The idea is to help people learn to eat only when they are really hungry, " said Karen Basen-Engquist, a behavioral scientist at the cancer center. "We eat for all kinds of reasons - sometimes because we are with other people or because we are bored or stressed."
It worked for Folloder. "I used to say that I was hungry all the time but I really wasn't, " she said. "Now I'm more in tune with my body."
Besides talking to a dietitian weekly, she stepped up her physical activity by using a hula hoop and an exercise bike. Folloder, who is 5-foot-9, went from 219 pounds to 191 pounds.
The women in Folloder's group will be compared to a "control" group that takes part in a weight-loss program but does not do blood sugar monitoring. Results are expected this year.
Fred Hutchinson's Wright is focusing on overweight and obese men with low-grade, slow-growing prostate cancer who have decided to take an "active surveillance" approach - which involves monitoring via blood tests, physical exams and biopsies - rather than treatment such as radiation or surgery. He is investigating whether keeping patients' glucose levels under control through weight loss will prevent the cancer from getting worse and improve survival. The goal is for participants to lose 7 percent of their body weight.
The study is based on the Diabetes Prevention Program, which showed that people at high risk for Type 2 diabetes can prevent or delay the disease by losing a modest amount of weight through dietary changes and increased physical activity.
Steve Borden, 57, enrolled in the trial, called Prostate Cancer Active Lifestyle or PALS, last November and was assigned to a nutritionist and exercise physiologist to coach him on diet and exercise.
The 5-foot-10 Borden has lost 30 pounds and now weighs 198 pounds. His target is just 1, 800 calories a day, and he regularly uses the treadmill and lifts weights. He said a recent test showed his PSA - for prostate-specific antigen, which when elevated can be an indication of cancer - has dropped slightly, although his doctors don't know whether that is connected to his weight loss.
In general, how much do people need to lose to improve their cancer odds? Ligibel of Dana-Farber said it is not clear but that data suggests a 5 percent reduction in body weight has a beneficial impact on blood sugar and inflammation.
For anyone wanting to reduce their cancer risk, avoiding weight gain in the first place is important, experts say. Brawley of Johns Hopkins said that the goal should be maintaining "energy balance" - consuming no more calories than are burned off through exercise and other activity.
Nutritionists say the key is cutting down on portion sizes, avoiding sugar and aiming for meals that are rich in vegetables, fruits and whole grains and beans and light on animal protein.
Anthony Perre, chief of outpatient medicine at Cancer Treatment Centers of America, said the Mediterranean diet - which emphasizes plant-based food, whole grains and olive oil - has been linked to improved cancer outcomes.
"But the diet that is the right one is the one that you can sustain over the long term, " he said. "Whether it's Atkins, low-carb or low-calorie, they all work if you stick with them."

Read Full article:

https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Cancer-s-disturbing-links-with-obesity-13766471.php

For more information on Bariatric, Metabolic surgery contact Kirloskar Hospital Ph: 8367719993.
Dr Surendra Ugale, is one of the india's best Bariatric and Metabolic surgeon, doing Weight-loss and Diabetes surgeries.. For more info visit us at www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com. For more info visit us at http://www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com/updates/years/u79?utm_source=facebookpage

The disturbing links between too much weight and several types of cancerSmoking has been the No. 1 preventable cause of ...
15/04/2019

The disturbing links between too much weight and several types of cancer

Smoking has been the No. 1 preventable cause of cancer for decades and still kills more than 500, 000 people a year in the United States. But obesity is poised to take the top spot, as Americans' waistlines continue to expand while to***co use plummets.
The switch could occur in five or 10 years, said Otis Brawley, a Johns Hopkins oncologist and former chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. The rise in obesity rates could threaten the steady decline in cancer death rates since the early 1990s, he said.

Yet only about half of Americans are aware of the link between excess weight and cancer. And researchers are struggling to answer such fundamental questions as how surplus weight increases the risk of the disease and whether, conversely, losing weight helps prevent cancer or a recurrence.

Being obese and overweight - long implicated in heart disease and diabetes - has been associated in recent years with an increased risk of getting at least 13 types of cancer, including stomach, pancreatic, colorectal and liver malignancies, as well as postmenopausal breast cancer. Researchers at the American Cancer Society say that excess body weight is linked to about 8 percent of all cancers in the United States and about 7 percent of cancer deaths.
Compared with people of normal weight, obese patients are more likely to see their cancer come back and have a lower likelihood of survival. Perhaps most alarming, young people, who as a group are heavier than their parents, are developing weight-related malignancies, including colorectal cancer, at earlier ages than previous generations, experts say.

The precise link between cancer and excess weight isn't known, but researchers are focusing on the "visceral" fat that surrounds internal organs. Rather than being a harmless glob, this fat is a "metabolically active organ" that produces hormones such as estrogen, which is associated with a higher risk of breast and some other cancers, according to the American Institute for Cancer Research, a nonprofit group that focuses on diet, nutrition and cancer.
The fat also secretes proteins that drive insulin levels higher, which may spur cell growth and increase the possibility of cancer. And it can cause chronic inflammation, another risk factor for the disease, according to the group.

"It's a complex interplay of metabolism, inflammation and immunity, " said Jennifer Ligibel, a breast oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. "It creates an environment that is more permissive for cancer."
About 7 in 10 Americans are overweight or obese, according to a 2015 article in JAMA Internal Medicine. People are considered overweight if they have a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29, and obese if they have a BMI of 30 or more.
The proportion of adults who are overweight has remained relatively stable in the past several decades, but the obesity rate has soared. In the early 1960s, almost 11 percent of men and nearly 16 percent of women were obese; in 2016, those percentages were 38 percent and 41 percent, respectively, according to the cancer society.
The risk of cancer rises along with excess weight. "It does appear that the risk is greater the more obese you are, " said Jonathan Wright, a urologist at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. There is a link between being overweight and cancer, "but it is not as strong, " he said.
The type of cancer that is most strongly associated with obesity is endometrial, which develops in the lining of the uterus. Obese and overweight women are two to four times as likely to develop the disease as women of normal weight, and the risk rises with increased weight gain, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Meanwhile, people who are overweight or obese are about twice as likely to develop liver and kidney cancer, and about 1.5 times as likely to develop pancreatic cancer than normal-weight people, according to NIH.
In addition, having too much belly fat - a larger waistline - is linked to an increased risk of colorectal and some other cancers, regardless of body weight, the cancer society said.
Several researchers are running clinical trials to try to prove what many already believe - that losing weight reduces the odds of developing cancer or having a recurrence. There are some indications they may be right - severely obese people who have bariatric surgery, for example, lessen their odds of getting cancer - but much more data is needed.
Carol Massey, who is 59 and was treated for breast cancer two years ago, is enrolled in a nationwide trial designed to see if losing weight makes it less likely breast cancer will come back. She has reduced her calorie intake, stepped up her exercise and gotten regular advice from a health coach based at Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, which is leading the Breast Cancer Weight Loss Study, or BWEL.
To be eligible for the trial, women must have a BMI of 27 or higher. The study, which will enroll about 3, 100 women, will compare Massey's group - which gets supervised weight loss and health-education materials - with a group that receives only the educational materials.
Massey, who lives in Paola, Kansas, said she quickly came to look forward to her coach's calls, which initially were once a week. "We got to be friends, she would ask about my family, " she said. "One time, she even called me when she was on vacation in Cabo San Lucas" in Mexico.
Over time, the 5-foot-8 Massey lost 30 pounds. She is now 150 pounds.
Those are the kind of results Ligibel, the principal investigator, is hoping for. If the study shows that slimming down is associated with reduced recurrence, doctors could prescribe a weight-loss program as standard therapy for breast cancer patients - much as cardiac rehabilitation is urged for heart-attack patients. That could pave the way for insurance coverage.
Gail Folloder joined a 16-week program at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center for heavier women at high risk of breast cancer because both of her parents had had cancer and she wanted to prevent it. The 67-year-old Houston resident underwent "hunger training, " which uses continuous glucose monitoring to show participants when they need fuel and urges them to limit their eating to those times.
"The idea is to help people learn to eat only when they are really hungry, " said Karen Basen-Engquist, a behavioral scientist at the cancer center. "We eat for all kinds of reasons - sometimes because we are with other people or because we are bored or stressed."
It worked for Folloder. "I used to say that I was hungry all the time but I really wasn't, " she said. "Now I'm more in tune with my body."
Besides talking to a dietitian weekly, she stepped up her physical activity by using a hula hoop and an exercise bike. Folloder, who is 5-foot-9, went from 219 pounds to 191 pounds.
The women in Folloder's group will be compared to a "control" group that takes part in a weight-loss program but does not do blood sugar monitoring. Results are expected this year.
Fred Hutchinson's Wright is focusing on overweight and obese men with low-grade, slow-growing prostate cancer who have decided to take an "active surveillance" approach - which involves monitoring via blood tests, physical exams and biopsies - rather than treatment such as radiation or surgery. He is investigating whether keeping patients' glucose levels under control through weight loss will prevent the cancer from getting worse and improve survival. The goal is for participants to lose 7 percent of their body weight.
The study is based on the Diabetes Prevention Program, which showed that people at high risk for Type 2 diabetes can prevent or delay the disease by losing a modest amount of weight through dietary changes and increased physical activity.
Steve Borden, 57, enrolled in the trial, called Prostate Cancer Active Lifestyle or PALS, last November and was assigned to a nutritionist and exercise physiologist to coach him on diet and exercise.
The 5-foot-10 Borden has lost 30 pounds and now weighs 198 pounds. His target is just 1, 800 calories a day, and he regularly uses the treadmill and lifts weights. He said a recent test showed his PSA - for prostate-specific antigen, which when elevated can be an indication of cancer - has dropped slightly, although his doctors don't know whether that is connected to his weight loss.
In general, how much do people need to lose to improve their cancer odds? Ligibel of Dana-Farber said it is not clear but that data suggests a 5 percent reduction in body weight has a beneficial impact on blood sugar and inflammation.
For anyone wanting to reduce their cancer risk, avoiding weight gain in the first place is important, experts say. Brawley of Johns Hopkins said that the goal should be maintaining "energy balance" - consuming no more calories than are burned off through exercise and other activity.
Nutritionists say the key is cutting down on portion sizes, avoiding sugar and aiming for meals that are rich in vegetables, fruits and whole grains and beans and light on animal protein.
Anthony Perre, chief of outpatient medicine at Cancer Treatment Centers of America, said the Mediterranean diet - which emphasizes plant-based food, whole grains and olive oil - has been linked to improved cancer outcomes.
"But the diet that is the right one is the one that you can sustain over the long term, " he said. "Whether it's Atkins, low-carb or low-calorie, they all work if you stick with them."

Read Full article:
https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Cancer-s-disturbing-links-with-obesity-13766471.php

For more information on Bariatric, Metabolic surgery contact Kirloskar Hospital Ph: 8367719993.
Dr Surendra Ugale, is one of the india's best Bariatric and Metabolic surgeon, doing Weight-loss and Diabetes surgeries.. For more info visit us at http://www.kirloskarlaparoscopy.com/

The disturbing links between too much weight and several types of cancerSmoking has been the No. 1 preventable cause of cancer for decades and still kills more than 500, 000 people a year in the United States. But obesity is poised to take the top spot, as Americans' waistlines continue to expand wh...

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