TY - JOUR
T1 - Metabolic consequences of bariatric surgery
AU - Lynch, Raymond J.
AU - Eisenberg, Dan
AU - Bell, Robert L.
PY - 2006/9
Y1 - 2006/9
N2 - Obesity has gained prominence as a main cause of preventable illness and death in the developed world. Surgical therapy for obesity is extremely effective in terms of weight reduction and amelioration of comorbidities. Bariatric procedures are not simply cosmetic operations, however, and involve considerable manipulation of the gastrointestinal tract to induce weight loss. The metabolic consequences of these procedures can be severe if not preempted with relatively simple postoperative precautions on the part of the patient and surgeon. Modern bariatric procedures are much safer than their predecessors, but nutritional and metabolic changes must be anticipated and compensated to fully realize the benefits of surgery. The metabolic consequences of the now outdated jejunoileal bypass, and the more modern Roux-Y gastric bypass, gastroplasty, and biliopancreatic diversion, are presented here, along with specific considerations of patient populations.
AB - Obesity has gained prominence as a main cause of preventable illness and death in the developed world. Surgical therapy for obesity is extremely effective in terms of weight reduction and amelioration of comorbidities. Bariatric procedures are not simply cosmetic operations, however, and involve considerable manipulation of the gastrointestinal tract to induce weight loss. The metabolic consequences of these procedures can be severe if not preempted with relatively simple postoperative precautions on the part of the patient and surgeon. Modern bariatric procedures are much safer than their predecessors, but nutritional and metabolic changes must be anticipated and compensated to fully realize the benefits of surgery. The metabolic consequences of the now outdated jejunoileal bypass, and the more modern Roux-Y gastric bypass, gastroplasty, and biliopancreatic diversion, are presented here, along with specific considerations of patient populations.
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U2 - 10.1097/00004836-200609000-00001
DO - 10.1097/00004836-200609000-00001
M3 - Review article
C2 - 16940875
AN - SCOPUS:33748464765
SN - 0192-0790
VL - 40
SP - 659
EP - 668
JO - Journal of clinical gastroenterology
JF - Journal of clinical gastroenterology
IS - 8
ER -