http://today.reuters.com/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=healthNews

Fatter rear ends are causing many drug injections to miss
their mark, requiring longer needles to reach buttock
muscle, researchers said on Monday.

Standard-sized needles failed to reach the buttock muscle
in 23 out of 25 women whose rears were examined after what
was supposed to be an intramuscular injection of a drug.

Two-thirds of the 50 patients in the study did not receive
the full dosage of the drug, which instead lodged in the
fat tissue of their buttocks, researchers from The Adelaide
and Meath Hospital in Dublin said in a presentation to the
annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North
America.

Besides patients receiving less than the correct drug
dosage,
medications that remain lodged in fat can cause infection
or irritation, researchers Victoria Chan said.

"There is no question that obesity is the underlying cause.
We have identified a new problem related, in part, to the
increasing amount of fat in patients' buttocks," Chan said.

"The amount of fat tissue overlying the muscles exceeds the
length of the needles commonly used for these injections,"
she said.

The 25 men and 25 women studied at the Irish hospital
ranged in age from 21 to 87.

The buttocks are a good place for intramuscular injections
because there are relatively few major blood vessels,
nerves and bones that can be damaged by a needle. Plentiful
smaller blood vessels found in muscle carry the drug to the
rest of the body, while fat tissue contains relatively few
blood vessels.

Obesity affects more than 300 million people worldwide and
is based on a measure of height versus weight that produces
a body mass index above 30. An estimated 65 percent of U.S.
adults are overweight or obese.

 

 

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