Obesity Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Obesity, including details on health, diet, prevention, exercise. | ||||||||
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Treatment with a dietary fat substitute decreased Arochlor 1254 contamination in an obese diabetic male.Redgrave TG, Wallace P, Jandacek RJ, Tso P Department of Physiology, School of Biomedical and Chemical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Western Australia 6009, Australia. redgrave@cyllene.uwa.edu.au A case manifesting symptoms due to organochlorine toxicity was treated with the fat substitute olestra in his diet. Before treatment, the patient was obese, with severe type 2 diabetes mellitus and mixed hyperlipidemia, chloracne, frequent headaches, and numbness and paraesthesias of his trunk and lower limbs. Earlier attempts at weight loss had been unsuccessful due to worsening of his symptoms. After inclusion of olestra in his diet for 2 years, weight loss was successful without aggravation of his symptoms, and the patient reverted to normoglycemia and normolipidemia. Olestra may have assisted weight loss and amelioration of his diabetes by increasing fecal elimination of organochlorines, rather than by preventing the partitioning of these pollutants into tissues, where they have been reported to exert antimetabolic effects on substrate oxidation. Published 6 June 2005 in J Nutr Biochem, 16(6): 383-4.
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