Author Topic: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??  (Read 362 times)

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Offline powderman

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Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« on: July 31, 2012, 03:54:24 PM »
Are your prescription pills making you gain weight?  By Alex Crees
Published July 31, 2012
FoxNews.com       These days, it seems almost any problem can be solved with a pill.  High blood pressure? Take beta blockers.  Asthma? Try steroids.  Feeling sick? Start a round of antibiotics. 
But some doctors argue that all these pills could be actually be working against you – and leading to weight gain.
Known as iatrogenic – or drug-induced – obesity, it’s a condition that many Americans suffer from and may not even know it. 
“In my practice, we end up seeing people who are obviously quite heavy and start to notice trends,” Dr. John Morton, director of bariatric surgery at Stanford Hospital & Clinics, told FoxNews.com.  “Many of them are taking a lot of different medications that make it much, much harder to lose weight through traditional diet and exercise.”
According to Morton, various prescriptions can lead to weight gain through a number of different mechanisms.  Here are some of the classes of medications that could be causing you to pile on the pounds:
1. Steroid medications: Steroids, which are used to treat autoimmune diseases like lupus or asthma, can slow down the metabolism and lead to extra deposits of fat on the body – especially around the abdomen.  “It’s pretty common on average to see anywhere from 20 to 40 pounds of weight gain,” Morton said.
2. Antidepressants: Antidepressants can lead to weight gain by affecting your appetite, according to Morton.  “Emotion and mood are closely linked to weight and appetite – they’re very closely intertwined,” he said.  “It stands to reason that if you try to adjust one, the other might be affected.” Antihistamines for allergies, Morton added, may also have a similar effect on appetite. 
3. Insulin: While life-saving in many cases, insulin can increase hunger and weight gain in diabetics – which could in turn increase their need for more insulin.  “It’s a vicious cycle,” Morton said.
4. Beta blockers and statins: Used to treat high blood pressure, glaucoma and migraines, beta blockers can work against you by bringing down your energy level and making it harder to work out.  Similarly, statins (for cholesterol) can lead to muscle cramps and limit exercise.
5. Antibiotics: “We’ve seen in the farming industry, they give antibiotics to animals to help them gain weight,” Morton said.  “The theory is, these medications disturb the gut bacteria.” He added the antibiotic effect is likely a cumulative one.  “In a study looking at kids who have had ear infections over time, the ones who took the most antibiotics were the most likely to become obese.  It’s not a smoking gun, but it makes you think about rampant antibiotic use,” he said.
While most of these medications are associated with modest amounts of weight gain – five to 20 pounds, depending on the type of medicine – taking multiple prescriptions at once could compound the problem. 
Morton cited one of his own patients, a 12-year-old girl, as the “poster child” for iatrogenic obesity.  Jennifer Graves was a happy, healthy pre-teen until 2005 when she was diagnosed with lupus.  Doctors put her on steroids to treat the disease, which led her to gain more than 150 pounds over a period of five years. 
Because of her weight gain, Graves also developed insulin-resistant diabetes, hypertension, incontinence, shortness of breath and a condition called pseudotumor cerebri, in which a person’s body exhibits symptoms similar to having a large brain tumor.  She was on more than 30 prescription medications and eventually had to undergo bariatric surgery to take off the weight.
“In retrospect, a little more focus and restraint by her doctors would have lessened [Graves’] weight gain and allowed her to mature appropriately,” Morton said, adding that as a pre-teen yet to go through puberty, Graves was especially at risk for weight problems from all her medications.  People in their 40s transitioning to middle-age are also at high risk for weight gain from prescription drugs, because of their slowing metabolisms.
Most of the time, instead of turning to a pill right away, physicians should make more of an effort to coach their patients on lifestyle changes like diet and exercise, Morton said.
“For a lot of these patients, just by losing five to 10 percent of their body weight, they may not even need medications,” he said.  “[Doctors] need to start looking at the issue of weight gain with prescription medication, and monitor their patients’ weights if they are put on a new medication.”
As for patients, Morton stressed the first step is awareness. 
“If you’re being put on a medicine for the first time, ask if it can lead to weight gain,” he advised. “Also, ask how long you’re going to be on the medication or if there are any alternatives.  A lot of time patients are put on medications and just stay on them.  There’s no end date or shelf-life.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2012/07/31/are-your-prescription-pills-making-gain-weight/#ixzz22GCPt2XD
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

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Offline Sourdough

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2012, 06:01:02 PM »
Most deffinately, I was put on a steroid for lung infection prior to retiring from the Air Force.  In 6 months I went from 180 lbs to 320.  I stayed at 320 for the year.  After the year I came off the steroid I lost down to 190 in in six months.
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Offline 5kwkdw3

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #2 on: July 31, 2012, 07:39:33 PM »
For me it was the multitude of antidepressants and antiseisure  medications I had to try to make my Neurologist happy.  My regular doctor said early on that based on my present complications that I'd end up on narcotics before it was all over.  So my Neurologist would put me on a med for six to nine months before lining it out as ineffective or problems with side effects.  I was on Neurontin for about 1 year and although it did help a little with my neuropathy I ended up gaining 150 pounds.  I was then put on Lyrica and gained another 30 pounds.  All the while the doctor kept telling me that my weight was mearly a factor of how much food vs. excersize I was putting in a day.  As soon as I dropped him as a doctor I immediately lost the extra weight doing and eating the same things before, during and after.


Now I'm on Morphine and feel like a champ and at a reasonable weight.  (Just like my family doctor predicted all those years ago).  Smithy.



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Offline Conan The Librarian

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #3 on: August 01, 2012, 02:51:02 AM »
WoW! Sorry you had to go through that!

Offline blind ear

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #4 on: August 01, 2012, 04:08:04 AM »
With the weight gain often comes poor heart pump function, (ejection fraction), pulmonary edema, and other heart. lung and circulation problems. Read your lables and be aware of your body and what it tells you. ear
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Offline powderman

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #5 on: August 01, 2012, 03:58:00 PM »
My legs bother me a lot, I do take a med for that but when my scrip for simvastatin is used up I'm going to ask for something different. I never knew til I read about it that the statins are responsible for a lot of leg probs. POWDERMAN.  :o :o
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

Only half the people leave an abortion clinic alive.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAiOEV0v2RM
What part of ILLEGAL is so hard to understand???
I learned everything about islam I need to know on 9-11-01.
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDqmy1cSqgo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u9kieqGppE&feature=related
http://www.illinois.gov/gov/contactthegovernor.cfm

Offline 5kwkdw3

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #6 on: August 05, 2012, 09:16:15 PM »
My legs bother me a lot, I do take a med for that but when my scrip for simvastatin is used up I'm going to ask for something different. I never knew til I read about it that the statins are responsible for a lot of leg probs. POWDERMAN.  :o :o


Keep in mind too, that there are other means to deal with leg pain.  Not too long ago I had a spinal implant.  The small unit is just above my right butt cheek with a few wires going to where they need to go.  It sends electrical pulses that counteract the pain signals and it works like a champ.  The unit is made by Medtronic and might be worth asking you doctor about.  Smithy.
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Offline gypsyman

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #7 on: August 06, 2012, 01:47:11 AM »
Everybody's different, so drugs affect people differently. Less than 3 weeks ago, I had a hip replacement on the left side. Doctor prescribed Percocet for the pain. I got out of the hospital 2 days after surgery, and only took one of those pills. I can deal with the pain, but not the way I felt on that stuff. No matter what I took, prune juice, all kinds of fruit juice,  I couldn't go to the bathroom. Probably would have gained weight if I'd have stayed on that stuff. Now it's just an asprin before I go to bed. Lost a couple pounds as I quit having a beer at night. Figure a couple months healing time, and it'll be time to enjoy a beer again. gypsyman
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Offline Needles

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Re: Can RX drugs make you gain weight??
« Reply #8 on: August 07, 2012, 06:23:58 AM »
The main culprits these days are the antidepressants and steroids. Statins can be outright dangerous. Beta Blockers can lower your energy levels and other hypertension meds can cause erectile dysfunction. (When the guy on the commercial says,"Nobody told me high blood pressure could lead to ED," that means the meds they give you for hypertension can cause it, not the condition!) Lyrica, used for fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndrome, as well as  an adjunct for other antidepressants, is itself a failed antidepressant. One thing to remember--- there are NO antidepressants that are approved for long term use. They are intended to be used a couple of months, max. Oh, and the stronger antibiotics can permanently kill off good bacteria in your gut.  :P

For most of these things, excluding the hypertension, you can go to a Chinese Medicine Practitioner (Acupuncturist), but go to a real one. Most states allow MDs and Chiropractors to do acupuncture after about a hundred hours of training. A real acupuncturist has a Master's degree in Oriental Medicine--- six years of grad school, usually crammed into four years, with at least 2500 hours of clinicals before they can even take the license exam. Nothing works better than acupuncture on nerve pain. No drugs work as well. Acupuncture can treat a lot of things other than pain, too.

There's a video out called "9000 Needles," about a guy from Kentucky whose brother sent him to China after a brain stem stroke. With all western medicine could do for him, he was still pretty well paralyzed. After the acupuncture treatments, he was able to walk--- with a walker, and he had to have help, but he walked into his church at the end. There's a book, called "The God Complex" by Chris Titus. It's written as fiction, but the Chinese Medicine parts are accurate--- it's sort of a weird mystery, but it criticizes western medicine pretty severely. Western medicine does what it does really well: If you're having chest pain, or trauma, or need surgery or antibiotics, western medicine is exactly what you need. There is a huge gray area where they really don't have a clue. (Most MDs won't admit that!)  ;)
Jim

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