OBJECTIVE: To determine the effectiveness of interventions designed to prevent and treat obesity, and maintain weight loss. DESIGN: A systematic review of randomised controlled trials. SUBJECTS: Overweight and obese adults and children. MEASUREMENTS: Post-intervention changes in weight, fat content and fat distribution, measured relative to baseline. RESULTS: For obese children, family therapy and lifestyle modi®cation appear to be effective in prevention and treatment, respectively. The effectiveness of interventions to prevent and treat obesity in adults remains unclear, although behavioural therapy and multicomponent strategies may be useful. Continued therapist contact appears to be useful for maintaining weight loss. Pharmacological interventions appear to be effective for up to 9 months, after which regain occurs. Surgery appears to be effective for the morbidly obese and gastric bypass is more effective than gastroplasty. In general, the methodological quality of studies was poor. CONCLUSION: Due to problems with methodological quality, it is recommended that research ®ndings indicative of promising interventions are replicated.
Processed nerve allografts performed well and were found to be safe and effective in sensory, mixed and motor nerve defects between 5 and 50 mm. The outcomes for safety and meaningful recovery observed in this study compare favorably to those reported in the literature for nerve autograft and are higher than those reported for nerve conduits.
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