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TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH: What to use to trim size of waist

DEAR DR. ROACH: I had several abdominal surgeries decades ago. Now that I’m approaching 70, I cannot seem to lose my tummy. My waist is approaching 35 inches despite a strict Mediterranean-style diet, walking or biking for over 30 minutes daily, and weight lifting daily.

I would like to consider a more aggressive approach. My goal is to reduce my waist size, and nothing seems to help. I’ve been eating healthy and exercising for years. I am happy with my health (low blood pressure, normal bone density and normal labs).

Could you enlighten me on procedures such as CoolSculpting, laser treatment and liposuction with the long-term effects and longevity of each treatment?

• P.O.

ANSWER: The most important message is that these treatments are cosmetic treatments to make people look slimmer. They do not have a significant effect on overall health as they do not remove enough fat to have an impact. However, if your goal is to have a thinner waist, all of them are effective at doing so. There are no trials that compare these modalities directly, so I will summarize from the available trials of each treatment.

CoolSculpting is a brand name for a device that uses the cold to damage fat cells, causing them to gradually shrink over time. It is effective for most people (a circumference loss of 2 centimeters after three months and 4 centimeters after six months), and the overall satisfaction rate is high — about 80%. Unfortunately, there are the occasional people who have a paradoxical reaction where the fat cells actually increase in size with the treatment; this leads to poor cosmetic results.

Laser treatments seem to have slightly less effectiveness than CoolSculpting, with an average circumference loss of 2.5 centimeters. I was not able to find much information on their long-term results.

Liposuction has a greater reduction in circumference and higher satisfaction rates (85% even after nine years) but does involve surgery. The long-term durability is shown to be up to a decade, especially for people who improved their diet and exercise (as one would expect).

DEAR DR. ROACH: Is there such thing as a walking seizure?

• L.H.

ANSWER: Walking at night is most likely to be sleepwalking, but it is possible that it could have been seizure activity. The fact that your husband has a seizure disorder and had missed his seizure medication makes a seizure much more likely. It can be impossible to tell the difference by history alone, and a video-EEG (electroencephalogram) may be necessary to be sure.

ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu.

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