Weight loss will be followed by fatigue and constant tiredness, research says
Wisconsin: A study presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery found that weight loss surgery increased the risk of cancer in obese people by about 50 percent. Are reduced to a hundred.
Researchers at the Gunderson Lutheran Healthcare System in the US state of Wisconsin studied 3,776 obese adults. Of these, 1,620 underwent weight loss surgery.
Researchers studied all of these individuals for more than 10 years to compare cancer rates between those who had surgery and those who did not.
Researchers have found that weight loss surgery is linked to a lower risk of developing cancer. Obese people are twice as likely to develop cancer as they are three times more likely to die from the disease than those who have undergone weight loss surgery.
Weight loss will be followed by surgery to reduce the risk of breast cancer, kidney cancer, thyroid cancer, gynecological cancer, lung cancer and brain cancer.
According to co-author of the study, Dr. Jared R. Miller, previous research suggests that weight loss surgery may be associated with a lower risk of developing cancer.
Weight loss will be followed by fatigue and constant tiredness, he said, adding that obese people should be considered at risk for cancer.