>From what I have heard, all of these issues come back as soon as someone comes off the drug. So either a person is committing to a lifetime of being dependent on this drug, or a person is committing to some period of time of ideal living, followed by a possible time of depression after reverting to the status quo.
This is true of every weight loss intervention: Weight Watchers, low-carb, keto, Whole 30, etc. Once people stop complying with them, they gain the weight back.
Most people don't realize how dismal the stats on long-term weight loss are. Almost no one maintains a substantial amount of weight loss for many years by following "just eat healthy and exercise" advice. The only intervention that does reliably work is bariatric surgery. The jury is still out on the new GLP drugs.
> The only intervention that does reliably work is bariatric surgery.
My understanding is surgery only works reliably because failure to comply with life style changes post-op is easily fatal and ethical doctors only perform the operation after patients have demonstrated that ability. In all but the most extreme patients, about a fifth to a third of the target weight loss has to happen pre-op for doctors to even consider the procedure. The surgery is essentially a sword of Damocles hanging over patients, reminding them that they'll die much faster than normal if they over eat.
Failure to comply with the post op diet might be fatal within the first few months of recovery (although I haven't heard of that happening, I'm sure someone has died from eating too much), but after that, you are going to be mostly healed up. And its the long term that will determine if the weight loss sticks. It certainly isn't just because the surgery selects for people with willpower. Because almost everyone who has it has gone through years of losing and gaining back their weight over and over.
Bariatric surgery usually works for 3 reasons. First and most obvious is that it reduces your stomach size so you simply can't eat as much. Second, in most cases, reducing the surface area of the stomach reduces the amount of hunger hormones that get released thus making you less hungry all the time. And the third is malabsorption. Meaning that of the food you do eat, you absorb less of the calories than you did before. So if it were possible, you could potentially eat the same amount as before but still lose weight.
In the addiction literature, the development of gambling dependence after bariatric surgery is limited. Mitchel et al. reported that 2 cases presented with post-operative gambling addiction in their 3-year screening study in 201 post-op case (5). In our case, the presence of genetic background may be a risk factor for the develop-ment of gambling
2 out of 200 cases is not that common and close to baseline level
Clinically, what causes the urge to have an addiction? Like in your statement, replacing food with gambling. I would assume that these are fundamentally two different reward systems for the brain, or maybe not?
This is true of every weight loss intervention: Weight Watchers, low-carb, keto, Whole 30, etc. Once people stop complying with them, they gain the weight back.
Most people don't realize how dismal the stats on long-term weight loss are. Almost no one maintains a substantial amount of weight loss for many years by following "just eat healthy and exercise" advice. The only intervention that does reliably work is bariatric surgery. The jury is still out on the new GLP drugs.