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People who have their stomach stapled or have a gastric band must eat smaller amounts of mostly low-fat foods, because their stomachs can't accommodate or process large volumes. If they overeat, they will feel nauseous, vomit, or suffer from other problems.
The most serious side effect seen in the pacemaker has been an infection linked to surgery. In Britain, the pacemaker costs about 15,000 pounds ($24,040), including the keyhole surgery used to implant it. Intrapace President Chuck Brynelsen said that's comparable to other weight loss surgeries.
The device is authorized for sale across the EU, though the company is first targeting weight loss clinics in Britain, Germany and Spain. It also plans to submit the device for approval in the U.S. once it has more data, and hopes it will be available there in 2014.
The pacemaker hasn't yet been implanted commercially in Europe, but Intrapace is in talks with clinics interested in offering it.
Brynelsen said the battery in the device lasts about five years and it will be up to patients how long they want to keep the pacemaker. "We don't know if patients will see (the stomach pacemaker) as a bridge to recovery or whether this is a crutch they will need for the longer term," he said.
Some experts said the pacemaker did not address people's underlying reasons for overeating. "The problem with these devices is they assume people are rational and that they eat because they're hungry," said Stephan Rossner, a professor in the obesity unit at Karolinska University Hospital.
"A lot of obese patients eat because they're depressed, they can't sleep at night, or they have nobody to have sex with," he said. "So whatever you insert into their stomach, they can out-eat that device because it's other things that drive them to consume."
Hetzner said he intends to keep the stomach pacemaker for about four years.
"I don't want to backslide," he said, adding he would recommend the device to others. "I want to be sure I can stick with it and that my body adapts to this new way of eating."
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