Gastrointestinal
Surgery for Severe Obesity
Contents
Severe obesity is a chronic
condition that is difficult to treat through diet and exercise
alone. Gastrointestinal surgery is an option for people who are
severely obese and cannot lose weight by traditional means or who
suffer from serious obesity-related health problems. The operation
promotes weight loss by restricting food intake and, in some
operations, interrupting the digestive process. As in other
treatments for obesity, the best results are achieved with healthy
eating behaviors and regular physical activity.
You may be a candidate for surgery
if you have:
- a body mass index (BMI) of 40 or
more—about 100 pounds overweight for men and 80 pounds for women
(see BMI
chart below)
- a BMI between 35 and 39.9 and a
serious obesity-related health problem such as type 2 diabetes,
heart disease, or severe sleep apnea (when breathing stops for
short periods during sleep)
- an understanding of the
operation and the lifestyle changes you will need to make.
The Normal Digestive Process
Normally,
as food moves along the digestive tract, digestive juices and
enzymes digest and absorb calories and nutrients (see figure 1).
After we chew and swallow our food, it moves down the esophagus
to the stomach, where a strong acid continues the digestive
process. The stomach can hold about 3 pints of food at one time.
When the stomach contents move to the duodenum, the first
segment of the small intestine, bile and pancreatic juice speed
up digestion. Most of the iron and calcium in the foods we eat
is absorbed in the duodenum. The jejunum and ileum, the
remaining two segments of the nearly 20 feet of small intestine,
complete the absorption of almost all calories and nutrients.
The food particles that cannot be digested in the small
intestine are stored in the large intestine until eliminated. |
How Does Surgery
Promote Weight Loss?
Gastrointestinal surgery for
obesity, also called bariatric surgery, alters the digestive
process. The operations can be divided into three types:
restrictive, malabsorptive, and combined restrictive/malabsorptive.
Restrictive operations limit food intake by creating a narrow
passage from the upper part of the stomach into the larger lower
part, reducing the amount of food the stomach can hold and slowing
the passage of food through the stomach. Malabsorptive operations do
not limit food intake, but instead exclude most of the small
intestine from the digestive tract so fewer calories and nutrients
are absorbed. Malabsorptive operations, also called intestinal
bypasses, are no longer recommended because they result in severe
nutritional deficiencies. Combined operations use stomach
restriction and a partial bypass of the small intestine.
Body Mass Index Chart

Find your weight on the bottom of
the graph. Go straight up from that point until you come to the line
that matches your height. Then look to find your weight group.
* Without shoes
** Without clothes
What Are the Surgical
Options?
Malabsorptive operations, also
called intestinal bypasses, are no longer recommended because they
result in severe nutritional deficiencies. There are several types
of restrictive and combined operations. Each one has its own
benefits and risks.
Restrictive
Operations
Purely restrictive operations only
limit food intake and do not interfere with the normal digestive
process. To perform the operation, doctors create a small pouch at
the top of the stomach where food enters from the esophagus. At
first, the pouch holds about 1 ounce of food and later may stretch
to 2-3 ounces. The lower outlet of the pouch is usually about ½ inch
in diameter or smaller. This small outlet delays the emptying of
food from the pouch into the larger part of the stomach and causes a
feeling of fullness.
After the operation, patients can no longer eat large amounts of
food at one time. Most patients can eat about ½ to 1 cup of food
without discomfort or nausea, but the food has to be soft, moist,
and well chewed. Patients who undergo restrictive procedures
generally are not able to eat as much as those who have combined
operations.
Purely restrictive operations for
obesity include adjustable gastric banding (AGB) and vertical banded
gastroplasty (VBG).
-
Adjustable gastric banding. In this procedure, a hollow
band made of silicone rubber is placed around the stomach near its
upper end, creating a small pouch and a narrow passage into the
rest of the stomach (figure 2). The band is then inflated with a
salt solution through a tube that connects the band to an access
port placed under the skin. 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 uses both a band and staples to create
a small stomach pouch, as illustrated in figure 3. Once the most
common restrictive operation, VBG is not often used today.
Advantages:
Restrictive operations are easier to perform and are generally safer
than malabsorptive operations. AGB is usually done via laparoscopy,
which uses smaller incisions, creates less tissue damage, and
involves shorter operating time and hospital stays than open
procedures. (See below for more information on laparoscopy.)
Restrictive operations can be reversed if necessary, and result in
few nutritional deficiencies.
Disadvantages:
Patients who undergo restrictive operations generally lose less
weight than patients who have malabsorptive operations, and are less
likely to maintain weight loss over the long term. Patients
generally lose about half of their excess body weight in the first
year after restrictive procedures. However, in the first 3 to 5
years after VBG patients may regain some of the weight they lost. By
10 years, as few as 20 percent of patients have kept the weight off.
(Although there is less information about long-term results with AGB,
there is some evidence that weight loss results are better than with
VBG.) Some patients regain weight by eating high-calorie soft foods
that easily pass through the opening to the stomach. Others are
unable to change their eating habits and do not lose much weight to
begin with. Successful results depend on the patient’s willingness
to adopt a long-term plan of healthy eating and regular physical
activity.
Risks:
One of the most common risks of restrictive operations is vomiting,
which occurs when the patient eats too much or the narrow passage
into the larger part of the stomach is blocked. Another is slippage
or wearing away of the band. A common risk of AGB is breaks in the
tubing between the band and the access port. This can cause the salt
solution to leak, requiring another operation to repair. Some
patients experience infections and bleeding, but this is much less
common than other risks. Between 15 and 20 percent of VBG patients
may have to undergo a second operation for a problem related to the
procedure. Although restrictive operations are the safest of the
bariatric procedures, they still carry risk—in less than 1 percent
of all cases, complications can result in death.
Combined Restrictive/Malabsorptive
Operations
Because combined
operations result in greater weight loss than restrictive
operations, they may also be more effective in improving the health
problems associated with severe obesity, such as hypertension (high
blood pressure), sleep apnea, type 2 diabetes, and osteoarthritis.
Roux-en-Y
gastric bypass (RGB). This operation, illustrated in figure
4, is the most common and successful combined procedure in the
United States. First, the surgeon creates a small stomach pouch to
restrict food intake. Next, a Y-shaped section of the small
intestine is attached to the pouch to allow food to bypass the lower
stomach, the duodenum (the first segment of the small intestine),
and the first portion of the jejunum (the second segment of the
small intestine). This reduces the amount of calories and nutrients
the body absorbs. Rarely, a cholecystectomy (gall bladder removal)
is performed to avoid the gallstones that may result from rapid
weight loss. More commonly, patients take medication after the
operation to dissolve gallstones.
Biliopancreatic
diversion (BPD).
In this more complicated combined operation, the lower portion of
the stomach is removed (see figure 5). The small pouch that remains
is connected directly to the final segment of the small intestine,
completely bypassing the duodenum and the jejunum. Although this
procedure leads to weight loss, it is used less often than other
types of operations because of the high risk for nutritional
deficiencies. A variation of BPD includes a “duodenal switch” (see
figure 6), which leaves a larger portion of the stomach intact,
including the pyloric valve that regulates the release of stomach
contents into the small intestine. It also keeps a small part of the
duodenum in the digestive pathway. The larger stomach allows
patients to eat more after the surgery than patients who have other
types of procedures.
Advantages:
Most patients lose weight quickly and continue to lose for 18 to 24
months after the procedure. With the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, many
patients maintain a weight loss of 60 to 70 percent of their excess
weight for 10 years or more. With BPD, most studies report an
average weight loss of 75 to 80 percent of excess weight. Because
combined operations result in greater weight loss than restrictive
operations, they may also be more effective in improving the health
problems associated with severe obesity, such as hypertension (high
blood pressure), sleep apnea, type 2 diabetes, and osteoarthritis.
Disadvantages:
Combined procedures are more difficult to perform than the
restrictive procedures. They are also more likely to result in
long-term nutritional deficiencies. This is because the operation
causes food to bypass the duodenum and jejunum, where most iron and
calcium are absorbed. Menstruating women may develop anemia because
not enough vitamin B12 and iron are absorbed. Decreased absorption
of calcium may also bring on osteoporosis and related bone diseases.
Patients must take nutritional supplements that usually prevent
these deficiencies. Patients who have the biliopancreatic diversion
procedure must also take fat-soluble (dissolved by fat) vitamins A,
D, E, and K supplements, and require life-long use of special foods
and medications.
RGB and BPD operations may also
cause “dumping syndrome,” an unpleasant reaction that can occur
after a meal high in simple carbohydrates, which contain sugars that
are rapidly absorbed by the body. Stomach contents move too quickly
through the small intestine, causing symptoms such as nausea,
bloating, abdominal pain, weakness, sweating, faintness, and
sometimes diarrhea after eating. Because the duodenal switch
operation keeps the pyloric valve intact, it may reduce the
likelihood of dumping syndrome.
Risks: In
addition to risks associated with restrictive procedures such as
infection, combined operations are more likely to lead to
complications. The risk of death associated with these types of
procedures is lower for the gastric bypass (less than 1 percent of
patients) than for the biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal
switch (2.5 to 5 percent). Combined operations carry a greater risk
than restrictive operations for abdominal hernias (up to 28
percent), which require a follow-up operation to correct. The risk
of hernia, however, is lower (about 3 percent) when laparoscopic
techniques are used.
Laparoscopic
Bariatric Surgery
In laparoscopy, the
surgeon makes one or more small incisions through which slender
surgical instruments are passed. This technique eliminates the need
for a large incision and creates less tissue damage. Patients who
are super-obese (more than 350 pounds) or have had previous
abdominal operations may not be good candidates for laparoscopy,
however. Adjustable gastric banding is routinely performed via
laparoscopy.
This technique is often used for
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, and although less common, biliopancreatirc
diversion can also be performed laparoscopically. The small
incisions result in less blood loss, shorter hospitalization, a
faster recovery, and fewer complications than open operations.
However, combined laparoscopic procedures are more difficult to
perform than open procedures and can create serious problems if done
incorrectly.
Bariatric Surgery for
Adolescents
With rates of overweight among
youth on the rise, bariatric surgery is sometimes considered as a
treatment option for adolescents who are severely overweight.
However, there are many concerns about the long-term effects of this
type of operation on adolescents’ developing bodies and minds.
Experts in pediatric overweight and bariatric surgery recommend that
surgical treatment only be considered when adolescents have tried
for at least 6 months to lose weight and have not been successful.
Candidates should be severely overweight (BMI of 40 or more), have
reached their adult height (usually 13 or older for girls, 15 or
older for boys), and have serious weight-related health problems
such as type 2 diabetes or heart disease. In addition, potential
patients and their parents should be evaluated to see how
emotionally prepared they are for the operation and the lifestyle
changes they will need to make. Patients should also be referred to
a team of experts in adolescent medicine and bariatric surgery who
are qualified to meet their unique needs.
Medical Costs
Bariatric procedures cost from
$20,000 to $35,000. Medical insurance coverage varies by state and
insurance provider. If you are considering bariatric surgery,
contact your regional Medicare or Medicaid office or insurance plan
to find out if the procedure is covered.
Is Surgery for You?
Bariatric surgery may
be the next step for people who remain severely obese after trying
nonsurgical approaches, or for people who have an obesity-related
disease.
Bariatric surgery
may be the next step for people who remain severely obese after
trying nonsurgical approaches, or for people who have an
obesity-related disease. Surgery to produce weight loss is a serious
undertaking. Anyone thinking about undergoing this type of operation
should understand what it involves. Answers to the following
questions may help you decide whether weight-loss surgery is right
for you.
Are you:
- unlikely to lose weight or keep
weight off long-term with nonsurgical measures?
- well informed about the surgical
procedure and the effects of treatment?
- determined to lose weight and
improve your health?
- aware of how your life may
change after the operation (adjustment to the side effects of the
operation, including the need to chew food well and inability to
eat large meals)?
- aware of the potential for
serious complications, dietary restrictions, and occasional
failures?
- committed to lifelong medical
follow-up and vitamin/mineral supplementation?
Remember: There
are no guarantees for any method, including surgery, to produce and
maintain weight loss. Success is possible only with maximum
cooperation and commitment to behavioral change and medical
follow-up—and this cooperation and commitment must be carried out
for the rest of your life.
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