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level: Bariatric Surgery

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level questions: Bariatric Surgery

QuestionAnswer
What is the WHO definition of obesity? Epidemic disease of the XXI century  Abnormal or excessive fat accumulation that presents a risk to health  Overall, more than 10% of the world’s adult population are obese
How is classification of obesity according to BMI?.
What are the different body shapes in obesity?Android (apple, weight is mostly above waist, higher risk of M&M) Gynoid (pear, weight is below waist, less harmful)
What are some facts about obesity?Multifactorial (genetics, psychology, environment) Genetics loads the gun, environment pulls the trigger
What is the solution to obesity?Surgery is the only effective durable tool for weight loss, indications (BMI>40, BMI>35 w/comorbidities [DM, HTA, hyperlipidemia, sleep apnea, severe arthrosis])
What are the 3 major concepts of bariatric surgery?Restrictive procedures (R, include Vertical banded Gastroplasty, gastric banding and sleeve gastrectomy) Malabsorption (biliopancreatic diversion, duodenal switch) Combined (Gastric bypass, mini-gastric bypass) Another technique is used non-FDA approved by Iranian which is plicated stomach
What are the most frequently used bariatric procedures?.
What is gastric bypass surgery?Developed by Mason in 1967  The size of the stomach is reduced by almost 90% and is directly connected to the middle part of the small intestine  Shortens the path of the food so less of it is absorbed
What are gastric bypass complications? Anastamotic leak  Anastomotic stricture  Ulceration of anastomosis  Gastric Dumping syndrome  Lack of absorption of nutrients
Image of gastric bypass?.
What is adjustable gastric banding? Developed by Dr. Kuzmak in 1982 later by Cadiere in 1993 No staples Ability to adjust stoma size Completely reversible  Nearly 50% of patients required removal of their Bands (Mercola 2012)  60 percent needed to undergo additional surgery (Mercola 2012)
What are gastric banding complications? Regurgitation of ingested food  Slip of the band  Gastric erosion  Infection of the fluid inside the band  Megaesophagus
What is mini-gastric bypass? Developped by Rutledge 1997  The size of the stomach is reduced by almost 80%  Shortens the path of the food so less of it is absorbed
What are mini-gastric bypass complications? Anastamotic leak  Anastomotic stricture & ulceration  Gastric Dumping syndrome  Lack of absorption of nutrients  Biliary gastritis
Image of mini-gastric bypass?.
What is sleeve gastrectomy Developped by Gagner in 2000 Mechanism (combined R&M  Restriction: Volume 100-150 ml  Hormonal: Ghrelin (stimulates appetite)) Advantages include no anastomosis or prosthetic implant making it technically easier in higher BMI patients
What are sleeve complications? Gastric angle Stenosis  Angle of Hiss: Leak / fistula
What are stats of successful bariatric surgery? Weight loss surgery is considered successful:  When a patient loses 50% or more of excess body weight EBW  Keeps the weight off for at least five years %EBW loss after 5 years:  Gastric-bypass & Minigastric-bypass: the average weight loss is 50-70 percent  Gastric Banding: patient may lose an average of 30 to 40 percent  Sleeve Gastrectomy: the average weight loss is between 55 to 70 percent
What are percentages of complications of bariatric surgeries? About 20 percent of people who opt for weight loss surgery require further procedures for complications (Klein, 2013)  30 percent deal with complications relating to malnutrition, like anemia or osteoporosis since the intestinse are absorbing fewer nutrients (Klein, 2013)  As many as 20 percent of people will gain a significant amount of weight back (Klein, 2013) Honeymoon period : 2 to 3 years  Weight regain might be related to :  Alcohol abuse  Liquid calories intake  Technical failures of the surgery