Obesity
Disease States
Drug Dosing & Calculations
Respiratory & Cardiac Effects
Surgical Weight Loss/Appetite Suppressants
100

Type of obesity characterized by central or abdominal visceral fat accumulation.

Android Obesity (Apple) 

- More common in men 

- Waist size > 40 inches for men & > 35 inches for women 

- Associated with an increased risk of: ischemic heart disease, HTN, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, death 

100

The classic presentation of this includes episodes of apnea during sleep without any respiratory effort. 

Obesity Hypoventilation Syndrome (OHS) 

- OHS is a long-term consequence of untreated OSA

- Over time, the respiratory center in the medulla fails to respond to hypercarbia appropriately

- Diagnostic criteria: BMI > 30, awake PaCO2 > 45, dysfunctional breathing during sleep 

- S/S: obesity, hyper somnolence during the day, hypoxemia, hypercarbia, respiratory acidosis 

- Respiratory depressant drugs put these pts at high risk of airway obstruction; use approaches that do not impact respiratory drive such as regional anesthesia, NSAIDs, ketamine, dexmedetomidine 

100

Does obesity increase the volume of distribution for lipid-soluble or water-soluble drugs?

Increases the Vd of both 

- Vd lipophilic drugs >>>> Vd hydrophilic drugs 

- Volatile agents are lipophilic, so agents with the lowest B:G coefficients (des or sevo) should be used, MAC is not affected

- Increased blood volume: requires ^ dose to achieve plasma concentration 

- Increased CO: faster drug delivery to vessel rich

- Altered plasma protein binding: altered free fractions available

100

Two ways to recruit collapsed alveoli.

Recruitment maneuver 

- Reopens collapsed alveoli 

- Give a breath to 40 cm H2O and hold for 10 seconds 

PEEP or CPAP 5-10 cm H2O

- Holds open re-expanded alveoli 

- Improves FRC, V/Q mismatch, & arterial oxygenation 

** Lungs do not grow in proportion to body mass. Important to give a tidal volume 6-8 mL/kg of ideal body weight

100

Tipo de procedimiento bariátrico con reducción gástrica y extirpación de una porción del intestino delgado.

Malabsorción 

- Limita la absorción de nutrientes. 

- Riesgo de depleción de vitamina K, vitamina B12, hierro y folato 

200

Tipo de obesidad caracterizada por acumulación de grasa en los glúteos y el fémur. 

Obesidad ginecoide (pera)

- Más común en mujeres 

- A diferencia de la grasa abdominal, que es metabólicamente activa, este tipo es metabólicamente inactivo y se utiliza para almacenar energía. 

- Mayor probabilidad de desarrollar enfermedades articulares y venas varicosas. 

- Reducción de la incidencia de diabetes no dependiente de insulina 

200

Classic triad of dysfunctional sleep.

Apnea or snoring with hypopnea during sleep 

Arousal from sleep 

Daytime somnolence 


200

A patient has a BMI of 36. What class of obesity is this?

Obesity Class 2 

- Underweight < 18.5

- Normal 18.5-24.9

- Overweight 25-29.9

- Obesity class 1 30-34.9

- Obesity class 2 35-39.9

- Obesity class 3 (morbid) > 40

200

The presence of tricuspid regurgitation on TEE may be the most useful confirmation of _________?

Pulmonary Hypertension 

- Common EKG changes include:

- Low voltage EKG due to ^ distance b/w heart and leads 

- Left & right axis deviation 

- QT prolongation 

- Ischemia & dysrhythmias 

200

Type of bariatric procedure that limits quantity of food that can be consumed.

Restriction (gastric band/sleeve)

- Least invasive 

- Since small intestine left intact, nutrient absorption unaffected 


300

According to the National Institute of Health, what is the leading cause of preventable death in adults?

Smoking

- Adult obesity ranks as the second leading cause 

- 1/3 of American adults are obese, and over 30% of children and adolescents are overweight or obese 

300

Defined as the cessation of airflow for at least 10 seconds (apnea) with 5 or more unsuccessful efforts to breathe (obstruction) and a greater than 4% reduction in SaO2.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)

- Hypopnea: a 50% reduction in airflow for 10 seconds, 15 or more times per hour, & is linked to snoring and decreased oxygen saturation. Common in OSA

- Incidence of OSA is directly proportional to BMI. Things that ^ the likelihood a pt has OSA: BMI > 30, abdominal fat, large neck girth 

- OSA is an independent risk factor for the development of HTN, cardiovascular morbidity, & death due to ANS stimulation

300

Calculate ideal body weight for a woman who is 5 feet 3 inches tall. 

55

- IBW = height (cm) - 100 (men)

- IBW = height (cm) - 105 (women)

- Inches x 2.54 = cm 

300

Does obesity produce an obstructive or restrictive ventilatory defect?

Restrictive 

- Compresses the lungs & reduces lung volume and compliance

- v vital capacity, v total lung capacity 

- v functional residual capacity - v expiratory reserve volume & normal RV

- ^ closing volume, ^ O2 consumption, ^ CO2 production, ^ work of breathing


300

What are the 3 most common signs of an anastomotic leak following gastric bypass?

Tachycardia (72%), Fever (63%), Abdominal Pain (54%)

- Unexplained tachycardia, HR > 120 bpm, is the most sensitive sign of a leak 

- Other s/s include:shoulder pain (left), pelvic pain, substernal pressure, hypotension

- Roux-en-Y gastric bypass combines restrictive and malabsorption proceeds yielding the best weight loss and improvement of comorbidities 


400

¿Cuántas calorías se necesitan para producir un gramo de grasa corporal?

- Si no se utilizan, el cuerpo almacenará estas calorías sobrantes en forma de tejido adiposo.

- Un gramo de carbohidratos aporta 4 calorías. 

- Un gramo de proteína aporta 4 calorías. 

400

Diagnosis of this disease requires at least 3 of the following signs:

- Fasting plasma glucose 100-110 mg/dL

- Abdominal obesity 

- Serum triglyceride level > 150 mg/dL

- Serum HDL < 40 mg/dL in men & < 50 mg/dL in women 

- Blood pressure > 130/85 mmHg

Metabolic syndrome (syndrome X) 

- Incorporates several disease states that coincide with obesity 

- Cardiovascular risk is 50-60% greater than the general population

400

A patient weighs 80 kg and stands 74 inches tall. Calculate the BMI to the nearest hundredth. 

22.64 kg/m2

- BMI = weight (kg) / height (m2)

- Inches x 0.0254 = m 

- Pounds / 2.2 = kg 


400

Cardiac output increases by how much for every extra kg of fat?

100 mL/min 

- Increased preload & SV account for the majority of the increase in CO; the HR is usually unchanged

- Increased intravascular volume & a high CO place a higher workload on the myocardium 

400

A norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake inhibitor that acts as an appetite suppressant.

Sibutramine

- Adrenergic overstimulation & serotonin syndrome may occur

- Phentermine is a norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor that acts as an appetite suppressant

500
What results due to hyperinsulinemia, SNS + RAAS activation, and increased cytokine concentrations in the plasma?

Hypertension 

- Heart dilates to accept the larger incoming venous return 

- Heart becomes thicker to compensate for the increased wall stress 

- Both diastolic & systolic dysfunction occur 

500

What is "STOP-BANG" used to predict? What does the S stand for?

Likelihood that a patient has undiagnosed OSA 

- Low risk for OSA = < 3 questions answered yes 

- 60-70% of pts with OSA remain undiagnosed 

- Polysomnography is the definite test for OSA 

Snoring

- Tiredness

- Observed apnea

- Pressure (^ BP)

- BMI (> 35)

- Age (> 50)

- Neck circumference (> 40 cm)

- Gender (male)

500

What drugs should use total body weight for dosing in the obese pt?

a. Remifentanil 

b. Rocuronium 

c. Cisatracurium 

d. Succinylcholine 

c & d

- Total body weight: succinylcholine, cisatracurium, atracurium, midazolam, fentanyl (loading dose), sufentanil (loading dose), propofol (maintenance dose) 

- Lean body weight: rocuronium, vecuronium, remifenantil, fentanyl (maintenance dose), sufentanil (maintenance dose), propofol (loading dose) 

- LBW = IBW x 1.3

500

The combination of what predisposes the obese pt to oxygen desaturation during apnea?

Small FRC & ^ O2 consumption 

- Optimal positioning includes the head-elevated laryngoscopy position (HELP): elevate the head, shoulders, & upper body above the chest 

- Preoxygenate pt with 100% FiO2 + CPAP 10 cm H2O until end-tidal O2 exceeds 90% - prolongs time before desaturation by 50%

- Reverse trendelenburg position relived pressure on the thorax and improves FRC 

500

A lipase inhibitor that reversibly binds to lipase and hinders the absorption and digestion of consumed fats.

Orlistat

- Since fat & the vitamins it contains (D,A,K,E) are not absorbed by the gut, they must be supplemented orally

- Insufficient quantities of vitamin K will impair synthesis of clotting factors 2, 7, 9, 10 & cause coagulopathy