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Digestive surgery
Sommaire digestive Surgery
Indications for digestive surgery for obesity
Contra-indications
Main procedures
Preoperative exams
Unfolding of the operation and immediate follow-up
Postoperative diet
Risks of the operation
Postoperative follow-up
Results of the surgery
Who are the superobese patients and what type of operation can we propose t
Sweet-eating and bariatric surgery
Are adolescents candidates to bariatric surgery
How to choose a bariatric operation
Gastric bypass
Gastric bypass (2)
Gastric bypass (3)
"Low BMI" Obesity surgery: is it worthwhile?
Robotic and bariatric surgery
The farewell party before obesity surgery
Weight gain in spouses
Sleeve gastrectomy (1)
The sleeve gastrectomy (2nd part)
Biliopancreatic bypass and duodenal switch
Biliopancreatic bypass and duodenal switch (2)
Biliopancreatic bypass and duodenal switch (3)
Digestive surgery

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Digestive surgery

Gastro-jejunal bypass (3): Results and long-term follow-up:


There are also long-term issues : Anemia, nutritional deficiencies (iron, calcium, vitamin B12 and folate), that request a regular follow-up (blood samples) and supplements. A gastric ulcer can occur in 3% of the cases, but can be cured most often by drugs. A stenosis of the anastomosis occurs in 5 to 7% of the cases, with vomiting, and can be cured by endoscopic dilatation. There is also a risk of late small bowel obstruction due to adhesions or an internal hernia: symptoms can be difficult to recognize if the obstruction is located on the small intestinal limb (bilio-pancreatic limb) because there is no vomiting, but isolated abdominal pain. A CT-scan should be performed.


One wonders what becomes of the remaining part of the stomach : is there more risk of cancer and how will it be detected, knowing that is no more access through endoscopy? As a matter of fact, thousands of operations have been performed worldwide and this complication has not been significantly reported, whereas modern exams allow a safe examination of the remaining stomach.


Weight-loss is constant and sustained . If you consider the excess weight, that can be calculated according to an "ideal body weight" given by the tables of the Life Insurance Companies,this excess should go down by 60% in 12 to 18 months.
Exemple : a woman is 160 cm tall and weighs 110 kg. Her theoretical excess-weight is 55 kg. She may hope loosing 36 kg after surgery.
Long-term results are deemed better than the results of restrictive operations such as Mason gastroplasty or lap-banding, the downside beeing more risks and more complexity. Many surgeons around the world have chosen this operation whatever the clinical condition, some prefer it when patients have special features (swee-eaters or binge eaters, superobese), and some perform it when there is a failure of a previous restrictive operation: this ultimate strategy makes sense although it carries even more risks due to post-operative adhesions, and may be called a "two-step strategy".

 


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