Dieter Pohl
Roger Williams Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Dieter Pohl.
Obesity | 2010
Dale S. Bond; John M. Jakicic; Jessica L. Unick; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Dieter Pohl; G. Dean Roye; Beth A. Ryder; Harry C. Sax; Rena R. Wing
Bariatric surgery patients report significant pre‐ to postoperative increases in physical activity (PA). However, it is unclear whether objective measures would corroborate these changes. The present study compared self‐reported and accelerometer‐based estimates of changes in moderate‐to‐vigorous intensity PA (MVPA) from pre‐ (pre‐op) to 6 months postsurgery (post‐op). Twenty bariatric surgery (65% laparoscopic‐adjustable gastric banding, 35% gastric bypass) patients (46.2 ± 9.8 years, 88% female, pre‐op BMI = 50.8 ± 9.7 kg/m2) wore RT3 accelerometers as an objective measure of MVPA and completed the Paffenbarger Physical Activity Questionnaire (PPAQ) as a subjective measure before and 6 months after bariatric surgery. Time (min/week) spent in MVPA was calculated for the PPAQ and RT3 (≥1‐min and ≥10‐min bouts) at pre‐op and post‐op. Self‐reported MVPA increased fivefold from pre‐op to post‐op (44.6 ± 80.8 to 212.3 ± 212.4 min/week; P < 0.005). By contrast, the RT3 showed nonsignificant decreases in MVPA for both ≥1‐min (186.0 ± 169.0 to 151.2 ± 118.3 min/week) and ≥10‐min (41.3 ± 109.3 to 39.8 ± 71.3 min/week) bouts. At pre‐op, the percentage of participants who accumulated ≥150‐min/week of MVPA in bouts ≥10‐min according to the PPAQ and RT3 was identical (10%). However, at post‐op, 55% of participants reported compliance with the recommendation compared to 5% based on RT3 measurement (P = 0.002). Objectively‐measured changes in MVPA from pre‐op to 6 months post‐op appear to be much smaller than self‐reported changes. Further research involving larger samples is needed to confirm these findings and to determine whether self‐report and objective PA measures are differentially associated with surgical weight loss outcomes.
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2010
Dale S. Bond; John M. Jakicic; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; J. Graham Thomas; Tricia M. Leahey; Harry C. Sax; Dieter Pohl; G.D. Roye; Beth A. Ryder; Rena R. Wing
BACKGROUND Physical activity (PA) is an important component of weight loss programs and should be encouraged for severely obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery. However, few studies have determined the amount and intensity of activities undertaken preoperatively by bariatric surgery patients using objective measures. METHODS Using RT3 tri-axial accelerometers, the present study compared 38 bariatric surgery candidates and 20 normal weight controls on activity counts/hr; the number of minutes daily spent in moderate-to-vigorous intensity PA (MVPA) and vigorous intensity PA; and the level of compliance with national recommendations to accumulate 150 min/wk of MVPA in bouts of > or = 10 minutes. RESULTS Surgery candidates, compared with controls, recorded significantly (P <.01) fewer activity counts/hr (13,799 +/- 3758 counts/hr versus 19,462 +/- 4259 counts/hr) and spent fewer minutes per day engaged in MVPA (26.4 +/- 23.0 min/d versus 52.4 +/- 24.7 min/d) and vigorous PA (1.2 +/- 3.4 min/d vs 11.8 +/- 9.0 min/d). More than two thirds (68%) of the surgery candidates versus 13% of the normal weight controls did not accumulate any MVPA in bouts of > or = 10 minutes and only 4.5% of obese patients met the weekly MVPA recommendation versus 40% of the controls. CONCLUSION The results of our study have shown that bariatric surgery candidates have low PA levels and rarely engage in PA bouts of sufficient duration and intensity to maintain and improve health. Additional research is needed to determine how best to increase PA in bariatric surgery candidates.
Obesity | 2015
Dale S. Bond; J. Graham Thomas; Wendy C. King; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Jennifer Trautvetter; Jessica L. Unick; Beth A. Ryder; Dieter Pohl; G. Dean Roye; Harry C. Sax; Rena R. Wing
To examine the impact of a pre‐bariatric surgery physical activity intervention (PAI), designed to increase bout‐related (≥10 min) moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA), on health‐related quality of life (HRQoL).
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2016
Dale S. Bond; J. Graham Thomas; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Jennifer Webster; Jessica L. Unick; Beth A. Ryder; Dieter Pohl
BACKGROUND The Bari-Active trial found that a physical activity (PA) intervention (PAI), versus standard presurgical care control (SC), produced significant increases in daily bout-related moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA, in≥10-min bouts) preoperatively. The present study examined whether PAI also produces superior improvements in psychological and/or motivational processes that may be important for PA adoption. OBJECTIVES Compare PAI and SC on baseline to postintervention changes in PA-related enjoyment, self-efficacy, and motivations, and examine whether greater bout-related MVPA changes are associated with greater improvements in these variables. SETTING University hospital, United States. METHODS Participants (87% female; body mass index = 45.0±6.5 kg/m(2)) were randomly assigned to 6 weeks of PAI (n = 40) or SC (n = 35). PAI received weekly counseling sessions to increase daily walking exercise. At baseline and postintervention, both groups completed 7-day objective PA monitoring and questionnaires to evaluate changes in bout-related MVPA and PA enjoyment, self-efficacy, and motivation. RESULTS Retention was 84% at postintervention. Intent-to-treat analyses showed that PAI on average reported more favorable changes than SC in PA enjoyment, self-efficacy, amotivation (i.e., lack of PA motivation), and identified and intrinsic regulations (i.e., more autonomous PA motivations; P<.01). In PAI completers (n = 33), changes in bout-related MVPA and psychological/motivational variables were unrelated. CONCLUSION PAI produced greater improvements in PA-related enjoyment, self-efficacy, and motivations than SC. The lack of association between objectively measured PA changes and psychological/motivational processes highlights the need for future research to identify which processes are most important for PA adoption and maintenance in bariatric surgery patients, and to determine whether the method used to measure PA affects the pattern of association.
Journal of surgical case reports | 2017
Miguel E. Cervera-Hernandez; Dieter Pohl
Abstract Splenic abscess as a complication of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) is rare. There have only been six cases in the literature. In most of these cases, the classic predisposing factors for developing splenic abscess were absent, leading to the hypothesis that transient bacteraemia caused by mucosal disruption during the surgical procedure and splenic ischaemia may play a role. These patients usually present in the late post-operative period with abdominal pain, fever and leucocytosis. The preferred treatment is intravenous antibiotics and percutaneous drainage or splenectomy. We report a case of splenic abscess caused by Streptococcus anginosus that occurred 20 days after LSG in a 45-year-old woman without immunosuppressive conditions. The patient was successfully treated with antibiotic therapy and percutaneous drainage.
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2011
Dale S. Bond; Rena R. Wing; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Harry C. Sax; G. Dean Roye; Beth A. Ryder; Dieter Pohl; Jeannine Giovanni
Obesity Surgery | 2011
Dale S. Bond; Jessica L. Unick; John M. Jakicic; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Dieter Pohl; G. Dean Roye; Beth A. Ryder; Harry C. Sax; Jeannine Giovanni; Rena R. Wing
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2009
Dale S. Bond; Siva Vithiananthan; Tricia M. Leahey; J. Graham Thomas; Harry C. Sax; Dieter Pohl; Beth A. Ryder; G. Dean Roye; Jeannine Giovanni; Rena R. Wing
Obesity Surgery | 2012
Jessica L. Unick; Dale S. Bond; John M. Jakicic; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Beth A. Ryder; G. Dean Roye; Dieter Pohl; Jennifer Trautvetter; Rena R. Wing
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2013
Dale S. Bond; J. Graham Thomas; Beth A. Ryder; Sivamainthan Vithiananthan; Dieter Pohl; Rena R. Wing