Bariatric surgery is an increasingly popular way to treat
morbid obesity. More than 170,000 Americans undergo the surgery each year, 10 times more than in the mid-1990s.
Dr. Ninh T. Nguyen (right) and other gastrointestinal surgeons at UC Irvine Medical Center perform as many as 200 bariatric procedures each year.
|
Two recent studies by UC Irvine Medical Center surgeons compared the outcome, quality of life and cost of the two most performed procedures and examined whether expanded Medicare coverage had enhanced their safety.
?Patients who qualify for bariatric surgery can choose between
gastric bypass and gastric
banding,? says Dr. Ninh T. Nguyen, who led the studies. ?The operations have become more streamlined and efficient, but we wanted to determine which is truly better by looking at the risks and benefits of each.?
Gastric bypass achieves weight loss by rerouting the small intestine to a truncated stomach
pouch, while gastric banding constricts the size of the stomach with an implanted ligature. The first study, published in the Annals of Surgery, involved 111 people who had
laparoscopic bypass and 86 who had laparoscopic banding.
Nguyen, UC Irvine Medical Center?s chief of gastrointestinal surgery, Drs. Johnathan Slone and David B. Hoyt, and researchers Xuan-Mai T. Nguyen and Jaimee S. Hartman found both techniques to be safe and effective for morbid
obesity.
Gastric bypass resulted in better weight loss, though patients had more complications. Gastric banding recipients experienced wider variation in weight loss, with 16.7 percent - more men than women - losing less than 20 percent of excess weight, which was considered a failure. There were no failures among bypass patients.
In February 2006, Medicare expanded coverage of bariatric treatments but limited it to those performed at sites certified by the American College of Surgeons or the American Society for
Metabolic & Bariatric Surgery that do at least 125 operations annually.
For the second study, published in the Archives of Surgery, Nguyen, Slone, Hoyt and fellow UCI doctors Esteban Varela and Brian R. Smith analyzed the outcomes of more than 6,200 patients who underwent bariatric procedures in the 18 months before and after the modification of Medicare coverage.
While the frequency of bariatric surgery remained fairly steady in that period, the number of U.S. facilities offering it decreased from 60 to 45, reflecting a shift to high-volume, certified centers.
Researchers found that treatments at these centers resulted in shorter hospital stays and fewer complications and deaths. A pre-2006 study had shown 30-day mortality rates of up to 2 percent for Medicare patients - ?too high,? according to Nguyen. The rate after the coverage expansion was 0.2 percent.
Recently named chairman of the advisory committee for the American College of Surgeons? Bariatric Surgery Center Network, Nguyen will next lead a trial exploring whether two connected balloons inserted into the stomach through the esophagus can induce weight loss similar to that achieved through the more invasive bypass and banding procedures.
The idea of using a gastric balloon to help patients feel less hungry was developed in the 1980s, he says, but didn?t pan out. The balloon sometimes ruptured and, if it slipped into the small intestine, caused an obstruction.
?The concept was good, but the technology wasn?t ready yet,? Nguyen says. It?s hoped that the double balloon will be less problematic. UC Irvine, which performs up to 200 bariatric operations a year, is one of several certified centers around the country participating in the trial, which may begin this fall.
Nguyen is determined to find new weapons in the war against what some call an ?obesity epidemic? in America.
?Obese individuals are at far greater risk of dying from coronary artery disease, type 2
diabetes,
hypertension, gallbladder disease and certain cancers,? he says. ?It?s critical to treat this condition.?
By John Murray for Physorg.com
Source
|
Morbid Obesity
|
 |
|
|
|
Bariatrics
|
 |
The branch of medicine that deals with the causes, prevention, and treatment of obesity. The term bariatrics was created around 1965, from the Greek root baro ("weight," as in barometer), suffix -iatr ("treatment," as in pediatrics), and suffix -ic ("pertaining to"). Besides the pharmacotherapy of obesity, it is concerned with obesity surgery. |
|
|
Hypertension
|
 |
Also referred to as high blood pressure, HTH, HTN or HPN, hypertension is a medical condition in which the blood pressure is chronically elevated. In current usage, the word "hypertension" without a qualifier normally refers to arterial hypertension.
The Mayo Clinic specifies blood pressure is "normal if it's below 120/80". |
|
|
Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass
|
 |
A type of gastric bypass procedure which combines restrictive and malabsorption techniques - meaning, it reduces the amount of food a patient can comfortably eat (restriction), and also reduces the amount of calories that can be digested in the small intestine (malabsorption). This combination of bariatric methods leads to greater weight loss and the roux-en-y procedure is seen as one of the best ways to treat clinically severe obesity.
See WLS Videos for animated surgery technique. |
|
|
Laparoscopy
|
 |
Laparoscopic surgery, also called minimally invasive surgery is a modern surgical technique in which operations in the abdomen are performed through small incisions as compared to larger incisions needed in open surgical procedures. Laparoscopic surgery belongs to the broader field of endoscopy.
The key element in laparoscopic surgery is the use of a laparoscope: a telescopic rod lens system, that is usually connected to a video camera. Also attached is a fiber optic cable system connected to a 'cold' light source (halogen or xenon), to illuminate the operative field, inserted through a 5 mm or 10 mm Trocar to view the operative field. The abdomen is usually insufflated with carbon dioxide gas to create a working and viewing space.
The abdomen is essentially blown up like a balloon (insufflated), elevating the abdominal wall above the internal organs like a dome. The gas used is CO2, which is common to the human body and can be absorbed by tissue and removed by the respiratory system. |
|
|
Obesity
|
 |
Obesity results from the excessive accumulation of fat that exceeds the body's skeletal and physical standards. Obesity has been defined as a weight more than 20% above what is considered normal according to standard age, height, and weight tables, or by a complex formula known as the body mass index. According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), an increase in 20 percent or more above your ideal body weight is the point at which excess weight becomes a health risk.
CLICK HERE TO OPEN THE JOURNEY BMI CALCULATOR! |
|
|
Diabetes Mellitus
|
 |
A disease that occurs when the body is not able to use blood glucose (sugar). Blood sugar levels are controlled by insulin, a hormone in the body that helps move glucose from the blood to muscles and other tissues. Diabetes occurs when the pancreas does not make enough insulin or the body does not respond to the insulin that is made. There are two main types of diabetes mellitus: Type 1 Diabetes and Type 2 Diabetes.
All forms of diabetes have been treatable since insulin became medically available in 1921, but there is no cure. |
|
|
Gastric Banding Surgery
|
 |
The adjustable gastric banding is a restrictive surgical procedure during which a silicone band is placed around the stomach, creating a small pouch. The band includes a balloon that is filled with a nontoxic fluid, most commonly a saline solution; periodic adjustments are performed by a healthcare professional who accesses the balloon via a subcutaneous port.
Gastric band placement, unlike malabsorptive weight loss surgery (e.g. Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, Biliopancreatic Diversion, and Duodenal Switch), does not cut or remove any part of the digestive system.
See WLS Videos for animated surgery technique. |
|
|
Metabolism
|
 |
All of the processes that occur in the body that turn the food you eat into energy your body can use. Exercise, food, and environmental temperature influence metabolism. |
|
|
Pouch
|
 |
Most bariatric surgeries restricts the amount of food a patient can eat by reducing the size of the stomach by gastric banding, stapling or removal. What results is known as the gastric pouch. |
|