"... helped rats shed almost 40 percent of their body weight... Measuring less than 1 centimeter across... the tiny devices — which are safe for use in the body and implantable via a minimally invasive procedure — generate gentle electric pulses from the stomach’s natural churning motions and deliver them to the vagus nerve, which links the brain and the stomach. That gentle stimulation dupes the brain into thinking that the stomach is full after only a few nibbles of food.... Unlike gastric bypass, which permanently alters the capacity of the stomach, the effects of the new devices also are reversible. When [UW professor Xudong Wang] and his collaborators removed the devices after 12 weeks, the study’s rats resumed their normal eating patterns and weight bounced right back on. Wang’s device has several advantages over an existing unit that stimulates the vagus nerve for weight loss. That existing unit, 'Maestro,' approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2015, administers high-frequency zaps to the vagus nerve to shut down all communication between the brain and stomach. It requires a complicated control unit and bulky batteries which frequently must be recharged. That ongoing maintenance can be a big barrier to use, says Dr. Luke Funk, a surgery professor in UW–Madison’s Division of Minimally Invasive, Foregut and Bariatric Surgery...."
UW press release.
December 18, 2018
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27 comments:
Not Big if true.
The washing machine is so conceived that, having been filled with a heap of ignoble tissue, the inner emotion, the boiling indignation that it feels from this, when channeled to the upper part of its being, falls back down on the heap of ignoble tissue churning in its stomach - more or less perpetually - it being a process that should end up in a purification.
(Francis Ponge, how things work, modified)
"...easily implantable..." is going to be a phrase we see more and more.
Define "easily" before you "implantable" into me.....
Finally, an end to World Humger!
"He and his collaborators patented the weight-loss device through the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, and are moving forward with testing in larger animal models. If successful, they hope to move toward human trials."
Who will license it and fund human trials? Medtronic? Merck? JNJ? Keep an eye on this one.
Essentially a pacemaker for your stomach.
I agree with Dave Begley. Lots of money to be made here if this thing works in humans.
Since I've been retired, I go to gym at the local YMCA, not the ritzy club that I used in Manhattan when I still worked. Different clientele. The Y serves a blue collar town with no pretensions to glamour. The Manhattan club served glamour conscious gay men and singletons.
At the Y, I seldom see a fit, slim person. The obesity epidemic is incredible, and incredibly ugly with its clothes off.
Last week, I sat in the tub with a group of walruses who were discussing whether they should have bariatric surgery.
Gonna be really handy when you want to starve a population to death without a lot of fuss.
Especially if you combine this with "Google Hate Speech" suppression technology.
-XC
“Tiny” “safe” “gentle” “natural” “gentle”. How soothing.
Shouting Thomas said...
Since I've been retired, I go to gym at the local YMCA, not the ritzy club that I used in Manhattan when I still worked. Different clientele. The Y serves a blue collar town with no pretensions to glamour. The Manhattan club served glamour conscious gay men and singletons.
At the Y, I seldom see a fit, slim person. The obesity epidemic is incredible, and incredibly ugly with its clothes off.
Last week, I sat in the tub with a group of walruses who were discussing whether they should have bariatric surgery.
12/18/18, 7:55 AM
Interesting. I also go to the Y, and its clientele is also mostly blue collar, but most of the people I see are in pretty great physical condition. On the other hand, at the other gym I go to (also mostly blue collar), the clientelle is a little on the older side, I would say, and most of them don’t look quite as fit as the people at the Y.
Or, you could eat less.
Shouting Thomas said...
The Y serves a blue collar town with no pretensions to glamour. The Manhattan club served glamour conscious gay men and singletons.
Apparently you go to a different YMCA than the Village People.
Hunger is not the problem
incredibly ugly with its clothes off
Do you have any guys with purple diabetes ankles? They seem to drop their memberships quickly after breaking the sauna benches.
Thinking "zoo dong wang" might spoil your appetite.
Shouting Thomas said..."At the Y, I seldom see a fit, slim person. The obesity epidemic is incredible, and incredibly ugly with its clothes off."...
ST, you are starting to sound like our fellow commentor, Titus (or is that Tight-ass?) for your condescending attitude. For all your posts on so-called Christian living and chewing out Althouse because she doesn't measure up to your standard, you may well be turning into a hypocrite.
Rather than researchers with Chinese names, Chinese menus would be a good way to trick fat people into eating less because who would want to eat explodes the vegetable shredded meat to pull the surface ?
For all your posts on so-called Christian living and chewing out Althouse because she doesn't measure up to your standard, you may well be turning into a hypocrite.
This blue-collar boy is turning into a drivethru. Bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit, please.
that is SO COOL!
So, i won't have to worry about eating because i'm hungry
Now! all i'll have to worry about is:
eating because i'm bored
eating because i'm anxious
eating because IT TASTES GOOD
eating because i Want to
This new, Miracle devise will eliminate nearly TWO PERCENT of my daily caloric intake
oh, someone's going say; but now, you'll Stop after a few bites; because your stomach will seem full.
Please explain the concept of Extra Large Thick Crust Pizzas then?
We sure spend a lot money trying to cure rats of various ailments. You'd think they were running the country or something.
What a great invention for so many folks struggling with this. I also expect that we will technology ourselves out from the global warming power grab thumb.
Packer, I think you're on to something big here.
I'm not overweight, but it breaks my heart to walk by all these bakeries and pizza joints. I have an arthritic knee, and it helps somewhat to remain thin. Still, it's a struggle, and I sometimes wonder whether a lifetime of hunger is worth the upside of minimizing knee pain on rainy days. I might be driving a bad bargain..........When I was younger I never got to sleep with all the great looking women like Warren Beatty and Woody Allen, but I was able to eat anything I wanted in as great a quantity as I wanted without gaining weight. I got to live the dream, and now it's over. I hope this implantable device works. My life is constant sorrow......The only remaining sensual joy is my afternoon nap. Eat your heart out RBG.
I like to eat out at the Y
"I eat because I'm unhappy, and I'm unhappy because I eat...
It's a long road ahead."
Lab rats are usually fed "rat chow", a balanced diet of ... well, largely unidentifiable stuff, containing what science says is an optimal combo of nutrients. No research I'm aware of says that rat chow would be the rats' diet of choice if they had something they considered better on offer. I'd be interested to learn whether this implant discouraged the rats' consumption equally if they were given the option of something they considered a REALLY high value treat. Because a relatively small amount of sweets can destroy any diet plan whereas if your sole lifetime diet consists of unflavored oatmeal, well, how difficult is it, after a lifetime of oatmeal, to forgo a bit of it, or even a lot of it, at every meal?
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