Overview
The therapeutic problem of obesity is weight control, a major difficulty, involving a significant change in eating behavior. A number of studies show that there are many factors of resistance to weight loss whether they are physiological, genetic, environmental pressure related, or psychological and behavioral. For some patients, the surgical approach seems the best alternative. Indeed, bariatric surgery is an effective therapeutic weapon in patients with morbid obesity. However, it has been shown that approximately 25% of patients are failing at two years of this surgery (Reinhold's index). Some of the failed subjects may benefit from surgical revision. As for the others, no intervention is currently proposed to them. Studies have shown that the psychological profile of patients who are candidates for bariatric surgery is predominantly impulsive, very anxious with a tendency to depression. The stress level of these patients would be important, and they would have low self-esteem. This study hypothesize that, in these patients, the establishment of hypnotherapeutic management associated with the usual dietary monitoring could modify eating habits thus promoting weight loss and an improvement in self-esteem , stress and anxiety compared to dietary monitoring alone.
Description
he therapeutic problem of obesity is weight control, a major difficulty, involving a significant change in eating behavior. A number of studies show that there are many factors of resistance to weight loss whether they are physiological, genetic, environmental pressure related, or psychological and behavioral. For some patients, the surgical approach seems the best alternative. Indeed, bariatric surgery is an effective therapeutic weapon in patients with morbid obesity. However, it has been shown that approximately 25% of patients are failing at two years of this surgery (Reinhold's index). Some of the failed subjects may benefit from surgical revision. As for the others, no intervention is currently proposed to them. Studies have shown that the psychological profile of patients who are candidates for bariatric surgery is predominantly impulsive, very anxious with a tendency to depression. The stress level of these patients would be important, and they would have low self-esteem. This study hypothesize that, in these patients, the establishment of hypnotherapeutic management associated with the usual dietary monitoring could modify eating habits thus promoting weight loss and an improvement in self-esteem , stress and anxiety compared to dietary monitoring alone.
There are still no studies assessing the impact of hypnotherapeutic management and self-hypnosis on the weight curve, self-esteem, stress, anxiety, or the quality of life of patients Obese in failure of bariatric surgery.
It is an Interventional, prospective, multi-center, controlled, randomized, open-label study with 2 parallel arms, evaluating the efficacy of hypnotherapeutic management in patients with bariatric surgery failure, compared to dietary monitoring alone.
Number of visits: 13 visits are planned: 1 visit of inclusion, a visit ensuring the first dietary follow-up, 9 hypnosis sessions (for the experimental group), two visits dedicated to the collection of the judgment criteria. Each patient is followed for 12 months.
The estimated duration of recruitment is 18 months.
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria:
- Obese patient (BMI = 30 kg / m ²)
- 18 - 65 years ( inclusive borders)
- Patient in failure of bariatric surgery and in which no surgical resumption can be proposed (in view of Reinhold's classification, the failure will be considered as a loss of overweight lower than 50 % in two years further to a bariatric surgery).
- Informed consent
- Patient in measure to realize all the visits and to follow the procedures of the study
- Subject affiliated to a social security system
Exclusion criteria:
- Pregnancy current or planned during the duration of the study, pregnant or breast-feeding women
- Craniopharyngioma or any other evolutionary malignant pathology, or chronic illness in decompensation phase
- Strong probability of not compliance to the protocol or drop-out
- Psychiatric pathology of dissociated type (schizophrenia; psychosis, bipolarity …)
- Sensory (hearing, visual) or cognitive deficits susceptible to hinder the progress of the sessions.
- Incapacity to understand the nature and the purpose of the study and\or communication difficulties with the investigator
- Patient having already benefited from a coverage by hypnotherapy for loss of weight
- Taken by treatment having an impact on the loss of weight (corticoid, antithyroid …)
- Major protected by the law or considered vulnerable (under guardianship)