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How does Surgery Promote Weight
Loss?
- Gastrointestinal surgery is the best option for people who are
severely obese and cannot lose weight by traditional means or
who suffer from serious obesity-related health problems.
- The surgery promotes weight loss by restricting food intake
and, in some operations, interrupting the digestive process.
- However, the best results are achieved with healthy eating behaviors
and regular physical activity.
Who can consider Weight Loss Surgery (WLS)
?
- People who may consider gastrointestinal surgery include those
with a body mass index (BMI) above 40-about 100 pounds of overweight
for men and 80 pounds for women.
- People with a BMI between 35 and 40 who suffer from type 2 diabetes
or life-threatening cardiopulmonary problems such as severe sleep
apnea or obesity-related heart disease may also be candidates
for surgery.
Choose the surgery option best suited to you:
- The most important step in weight loss surgery is to know about
the various surgical options.
- The best source of information will be your bariatric surgeon
and other physicians who will recommend the best option to you
for weight loss.
- Make sure you understand well about the option being recommended.
- The decision to have a weight loss surgical procedure may take
several visits to their office and consultation with more than
one doctor.
- Ask your doctor for names of other patients who have had similar
weight loss surgeries and who are willing to discuss their experiences,
good and bad, with you.
- Although the results of weight loss surgery can be drastic,
there are potential risks and complications. Before making your
decision, you should be well informed.
- Before you sign a consent form, you should have a solid understanding
of what the complications involved.
What are options of Weight Loss Surgery?
Gastrointestinal surgery for obesity is also called bariatric
surgery. It alters the digestive process. The operations promote
weight loss by closing off parts of the stomach to make it smaller.
Operations that only reduce stomach size are known as "restrictive
operations" because they restrict the amount of food the stomach
can hold.
Some operations combine stomach restriction with a partial bypass
of the small intestine. These procedures create a direct connection
from the stomach to the lower segment of the small intestine, literally
bypassing portions of the digestive tract that absorb calories and
nutrients. These are known as malabsorptive operations.
Weight Loss Surgery is an expensive option to
lose weight.
There are several types of restrictive and malabsorptive operations.
Each one carries its own benefits and risks.
Benefits
- Right after surgery, most patients lose weight quickly and continue
to lose for 18 to 24 months after the procedure. Although most
patients regain 5 to 10 percent of the weight they lost, many
maintain a long-term weight loss of about 100 pounds.
- Surgery improves most obesity-related conditions. For example,
in one study blood sugar levels of 83 percent of obese patients
with diabetes returned to normal after surgery.
Risks
- Patients who have weight-loss surgery require follow-up operations
to correct complications.
- Abdominal hernia is the most common complication requiring follow-up
surgery
- Less common complications include breakdown of the staple line
and stretched stomach outlets.
- During rapid or substantial weight loss, a person's risk of
developing gallstones increases.
- Nearly 30 percent of patients who have weight-loss surgery develop
nutritional deficiencies such as anemia, osteoporosis, and metabolic
bone disease. These deficiencies usually can be avoided if vitamin
and mineral intakes are high enough.
- Women of childbearing age should avoid pregnancy until their
weight becomes stable because rapid weight loss and nutritional
deficiencies can harm a developing fetus.
Restrictive Operations
Restrictive operations serve only to restrict food intake and do
not interfere with the normal digestive process. To perform the
surgery, doctors create a small pouch at the top of the stomach
where food enters from the esophagus. Initially, the pouch holds
about 1 ounce of food and later expands to 2-3 ounces. The lower
outlet of the pouch usually has a diameter of only about ¾
inch. This small outlet delays the emptying of food from the pouch
and causes a feeling of fullness.
As a result of this surgery, most people lose the ability to eat
large amounts of food at one time. After an operation, the person
usually can eat only ¾ to 1 cup of food without discomfort
or nausea. Also, food has to be well chewed. Restrictive operations
for obesity include adjustable gastric banding (AGB) and vertical
banded gastroplasty (VBG).
- Adjustable gastric banding (AGB). In this procedure, a hollow
band made of special material is placed around the stomach near
its upper end, creating a small pouch and a narrow passage into
the larger remainder of the stomach. The band is then inflated
with a salt solution. 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) This has been the most common
restrictive operation for weight control. In this, both a band
and staples are used to create a small stomach pouch.
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