The Weight Loss Surgery Program
About Bariatric Surgery
What is Bariatric Surgery?
Bariatric surgery is a term derived from the Greek words: ''weight'' and ''treatment.'' Bariatric
surgical procedures promote weight loss through two
different methods:
- Restrictive Procedure:
This method makes the stomach smaller and seals off most of the stomach
to reduce the amount of food one can eat. The amount of food that can be eaten
is restricted.
- Malabsorptive
procedure: The small intestine is rearranged to reduce the calories the bodies can
absorb.
There are several different types of bariatric weight loss surgical
procedures, but they are known collectively as 'bariatric surgery'.
What Are my Surgical Options? Malabsorptive
operations, also called intestinal bypasses, are no longer recommended because
they result in severe nutritional deficiencies. There are several types of
restrictive and combined operations. Each one has its own benefits and
risks.
Restrictive Operations
Purely restrictive operations only limit food intake and do not interfere
with the normal digestive process. To perform the operation, doctors create a
small pouch at the top of the stomach where food enters from the esophagus. At
first, the pouch holds about 1 ounce of food and later may stretch to 2-3
ounces. The lower outlet of the pouch is usually about ½ inch in diameter or
smaller. This small outlet delays the emptying of food from the pouch into the
larger part of the stomach and causes a feeling of fullness. After the
operation, patients can no longer eat large amounts of food at one time. Most
patients can eat about ½ to 1 cup of food without discomfort or nausea, but the
food has to be soft, moist, and well chewed. Patients who undergo restrictive
procedures generally are not able to eat as much as those who have combined
operations.
Purely restrictive operations for obesity include:
- Adjustable gastric banding (AGB)
- Vertical banded
gastroplasty (VBG)
Adjustable gastric
banding
- In this procedure, a hollow band made of silicone
rubber is placed around the stomach near its upper end, creating a small
pouch and a narrow passage into the rest of the stomach.
- The band is then inflated with a salt solution
through a tube that connects the band to an access port placed under the
skin.
- It can be tightened or loosened over time to change the size of the
passage by increasing or decreasing the amount of salt solution.
Vertical banded
gastroplasty
- VBG uses both a band and staples to create a
small stomach pouch.
- Once the most common restrictive operation, VBG is not often used
today
What are the advantages of Restrictive
operations?
-
Restrictive operations are easier to perform and are generally safer than
malabsorptive operations.
-
AGB is usually done via laparoscopy, which uses smaller incisions,
creates less tissue damage, and involves shorter operating time and hospital
stays than open procedures. (See below for more information on laparoscopy.)
-
Restrictive operations can be reversed if necessary, and result in few
nutritional deficiencies
What are the disadvantages of Restrictive operations?
-
Patients who undergo restrictive operations generally lose less weight
than patients who have malabsorptive operations, and are less likely to
maintain weight loss over the long term.
-
Patients generally lose about half of their excess body weight in the
first year after restrictive procedures.
-
However, in the first 3 to 5 years after VBG patients may regain some of
the weight they lost.
-
By 10 years, as few as 20 percent of patients have kept the weight off.
(Although there is less information about long-term results with AGB, there is
some evidence that weight loss results are better than with VBG.)
-
Some patients regain weight by eating high-calorie soft foods that easily
pass through the opening to the stomach.
-
Others are unable to change their eating habits and do not lose much
weight to begin with.
-
Successful results depend on the patient’s willingness to adopt a
long-term plan of healthy eating and regular physical activity.
What are the Risks?
-
One of the most common risks of restrictive operations is vomiting,
which occurs when the patient eats too much or the narrow passage into the
larger part of the stomach is blocked.
-
Another is slippage or wearing away of the band.
-
A common risk of AGB is breaks in the tubing between the band and the
access port. This can cause the salt solution to leak, requiring another
operation to repair.
-
Some patients experience infections and bleeding, but this is much less
common than other risks.
-
Between 15 and 20 percent of VBG patients may have to undergo a second
operation for a problem related to the procedure.
-
Although restrictive operations are the safest of the bariatric
procedures, they still carry risk—in less than 1 percent of all cases,
complications can result in death.
Combined Restrictive/Malabsorptive Operations
Because combined operations result in greater weight loss
than restrictive operations, they may also be more effective in improving the
health problems associated with severe obesity, such as hypertension (high blood
pressure), sleep apnea, type 2 diabetes, and osteoarthritis.
Combined operations are the most common bariatric procedures. They restrict
both food intake and the amount of calories and nutrients the body
absorbs.
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
(RGB)
This operation is the most common and successful combined procedure in the
United States.
- First, the surgeon creates a small stomach pouch to
restrict food intake
- Next, a Y-shaped section of the small intestine is
attached to the pouch to allow food to bypass the lower stomach, the duodenum
(the first segment of the small intestine), and the first portion of the
jejunum (the second segment of the small intestine).
- This reduces the amount of calories and nutrients the
body absorbs.
- Rarely, a cholecystectomy (gall bladder removal) is performed to avoid the
gallstones that may result from rapid weight loss.
More commonly, patients take medication after the operation to dissolve
gallstones.
Biliopancreatic diversion (BPD)
In this more complicated combined operation, the
lower portion of the stomach is removed
- The small pouch that remains is connected
directly to the final segment of the small intestine, completely bypassing the
duodenum and the jejunum.
- Although this procedure leads to weight loss,
it is used less often than other types of operations because of the high risk
for nutritional deficiencies.
- A variation of BPD includes a “duodenal switch”, which leaves a
larger portion of the stomach intact, including the pyloric valve that
regulates the release of stomach contents into the small intestine. It also
keeps a small part of the duodenum in the digestive pathway. The larger
stomach allows patients to eat more after the surgery than patients who have
other types of procedures.
What are the advantages of Combined Restrictive/Malabsorptive
Operations?
Most patients lose weight quickly and continue to lose for 18 to 24 months
after the procedure.
- With the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, many patients
maintain a weight loss of 60 to 70 percent of their excess weight for 10 years
or more.
- With BPD, most studies report an average weight loss of 75 to 80 percent
of excess weight.
Because combined operations result in greater weight loss than restrictive
operations, they may also be more effective in improving the health problems
associated with severe obesity, such as hypertension (high blood pressure),
sleep apnea, type 2 diabetes, and osteoarthritis.
What are the disadvantages of Combined Restrictive/Malabsorptive
Operations?
Combined procedures are more difficult to perform than the restrictive
procedures. They are also more likely to result in long-term nutritional
deficiencies.
- This is because the operation causes food to bypass
the duodenum and jejunum, where most iron and calcium are absorbed.
- Menstruating women may develop anemia because not
enough vitamin B12 and iron are absorbed.
- Decreased absorption of calcium may also bring on
osteoporosis and related bone diseases.
- Patients must take nutritional supplements that usually prevent these
deficiencies. Patients who have the biliopancreatic diversion procedure must
also take fat-soluble (dissolved by fat) vitamins A, D, E, and K supplements,
and require life-long use of special foods and medications.
RGB and BPD operations may also cause “dumping syndrome,” an unpleasant
reaction that can occur after a meal high in simple carbohydrates, which contain
sugars that are rapidly absorbed by the body. Stomach contents move too quickly
through the small intestine, causing symptoms such as nausea, bloating,
abdominal pain, weakness, sweating, faintness, and sometimes diarrhea after
eating. Because the duodenal switch operation keeps the pyloric valve intact, it
may reduce the likelihood of dumping syndrome.
What are the Risks?
In addition to risks associated with restrictive procedures such as
infection, combined operations are more likely to lead to complications.
- The risk of death associated with these types of
procedures is lower for the gastric bypass (less than 1 percent of patients)
than for the biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (2.5 to 5
percent).
-
Combined operations carry a greater risk than restrictive
operations for abdominal hernias (up to 28 percent), which require a
follow-up operation to correct. The risk of hernia, however, is lower (about
3 percent) when laparoscopic techniques are used.
What is Laparoscopic Bariatric
Surgery?
In laparoscopy, the surgeon makes several
very small incisions through which slender surgical instruments are passed.
This technique eliminates the need for a large incision and creates less tissue
damage.The small incisions result in less blood loss, shorter hospitalization, a
faster recovery, and fewer complications than open operations.
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