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Deep Brain Stimulation of the Hypothalamus Leads to Increased Metabolic Rate in Refractory Obesity

Authors :
Joshua S Catapano
Jakub Godzik
Nestor D. Tomycz
Corey T. Walker
Elizabeth F. Sutton
Eric Ravussin
Michael Y. Oh
Alexander C. Whiting
Donald Whiting
Source :
World Neurosurg
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objective Obesity has become a worldwide epidemic, with very few long-term successful treatment options for refractory disease. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the bilateral lateral hypothalamus (LH) in refractory obesity has been performed safely. However, questions remain regarding the optimal settings and its effects on metabolic rate. The goals of our experiment were to determine the optimal DBS settings and the actual effect of optimal stimulation on energy expenditure. Methods After bilateral LH DBS implantation, 2 subjects with treatment refractory obesity underwent 4 days of metabolic testing. The subjects slept overnight in a respiratory chamber to measure their baseline sleep energy expenditure, followed by 4 consecutive days of resting metabolic rate (RMR) testing at different stimulation settings. On day 4, the optimized DBS settings were used, and sleep energy expenditure was measured again overnight in the room calorimeter. Results During daily testing, the RMR fluctuated acutely with changes in stimulation settings and returned to baseline immediately after turning off the stimulation. Optimal stimulation settings selected for participants showed a 20% and 16% increase in RMR for the 2 participants. Overnight sleep energy expenditure measurements at these optimized settings on day 4 yielded a 10.4% and 4.8% increase over the baseline measurements for the 2 participants. Conclusions These findings have demonstrated the efficacy of optimized DBS of the LH on increasing the RMR acutely and maintaining this increase during overnight sleep. These promising preliminary findings have laid the groundwork for the possible treatment of refractory obesity with DBS.

Details

ISSN :
18788769
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ee1723160e81635a54bc73890847c37