Gastric Surgery for Severe Obesity
Severe obesity is a chronic condition that is very
difficult to treat. Surgery to promote weight loss by restricting food intake or
interrupting digestive processes is an option for severely obese people. A body mass index
(BMI) above 40 -- which means about 100 pounds of overweight for men and about 80 pounds
for women -- indicates that a person is severely obese and therefore a candidate for
surgery. Surgery also may be an option for people with a BMI between 35 and 40 who suffer
from life-threatening cardiopulmonary problems (for example, severe sleep apnea or
obesity-related heart disease) or diabetes. However, as in other treatments for obesity,
successful results depend mainly on motivation and behavior.
NOTE: You can use our Body Mass Index calculator to determine if you are overweight for your height.
The Normal Digestive Process
Normally, as food moves along the digestive tract,
appropriate digestive juices and enzymes arrive at the right place at the right time to
digest and absorb calories and nutrients. 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?
The concept of gastric surgery to control obesity grew out
of results of operations for cancer or severe ulcers that removed large portions of the
stomach or small intestine. Because patients undergoing these procedures tended to lose
weight after surgery, some physicians began to use such operations to treat severe
obesity. The first operation that was widely used for severe obesity was the intestinal
bypass. This operation, first used 40 years ago, produces weight loss by causing
malabsorption. The idea was that patients could eat large amounts of food, which would be
poorly digested or passed along too fast for the body to absorb many calories. The problem
with this surgery was that it caused a loss of essential nutrients and its side effects
were unpredictable and sometimes fatal. The original form of the intestinal bypass
operation is no longer used.
Surgeons now use techniques that produce weight loss primarily by limiting how much the
stomach can hold. These restrictive procedures are often combined with modified gastric
bypass procedures that somewhat limit calorie and nutrient absorption and may lead to
altered food choices. Two ways that surgical procedures promote weight loss
are:
- By decreasing food intake (restriction). Gastric banding,
gastric bypass, and vertical-banded gastroplasty are surgeries that limit the amount of
food the stomach can hold by closing off or removing parts of the stomach. These
operations also delay emptying of the stomach (gastric pouch).
- By causing food to be poorly digested and absorbed
(malabsorption). In the gastric bypass procedures, a surgeon makes a direct connection
from the stomach to a lower segment of the small intestine, bypassing the duodenum, and
some of the jejunum.
Although results of operations using these procedures are
more predictable and manageable, side effects persist for some patients.
What Are the Surgical Options?
Restriction Operations
Restriction operations are the surgeries most often used
for producing weight loss. Food intake is restricted by creating a small pouch at the top
of the stomach where the food enters from the esophagus. The pouch initially holds about 1
ounce of food and expands to 2-3 ounces with time. The pouch's lower outlet usually has a
diameter of about 1/4 inch. The small outlet delays the emptying of food from the pouch
and causes a feeling of fullness.
After an operation, the person usually can eat only a half to a whole cup of food without
discomfort or nausea. Also, food has to be well chewed. For most people, the ability to
eat a large amount of food at one time is lost, but some patients do return to eating
modest amounts of food without feeling hungry.
Restriction operations for obesity include gastric banding and vertical banded
gastroplasty. Both operations serve only to restrict food intake. They do not interfere
with the normal digestive process.
- Gastric banding: In this procedure, a band made of special
material is placed around the stomach near its upper end, creating a small pouch and a
narrow passage into the larger remainder of the stomach. In the future, it may be possible
to perform gastric banding with smaller incisions through a laparoscope, a flexible
fiberoptic tube and light source through which some surgical instruments may be passed.
Laparoscopic gastric banding has not yet been approved by the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA).
- Vertical banded gastroplasty (VBG): This procedure is the
most frequently used restrictive operation for weight control. Both a band and staples are
used to create a small stomach pouch.
Restrictive operations lead to weight loss in almost all
patients. However, weight regain does occur in some patients. About 30 percent of persons
undergoing vertical banded gastroplasty achieve normal weight, and about 80 percent
achieve some degree of weight loss. However, some patients are unable to adjust their
eating habits and fail to lose the desired weight. In all weight-loss operations,
successful results depend on your motivation and behaviors.
A common risk of restrictive operations is vomiting caused by the small stomach being
overly stretched by food particles that have not been chewed well. Other risks of VBG
include erosion of the band, breakdown of the staple line, and, in a small number of
cases, leakage of stomach juices into the abdomen. The latter requires an emergency
operation. In a very small number of cases (less than 1%) infection or death from
complications can occur.
Gastric Bypass Operations
These operations combine creation of small stomach pouches
to restrict food intake and construction of bypasses of the duodenum and other segments of
the small intestine to cause malabsorption.
- Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RGB): This operation is the most
common gastric bypass procedure. First, a small stomach pouch is created by stapling or by
vertical banding. This causes restriction in food intake. Next, a Y-shaped section of the
small intestine is attached to the pouch to allow food to bypass the duodenum (the first
segment of the small intestine) as well as the first portion of the jejunum (the second
segment of the small intestine). This causes reduced calorie and nutrient absorption.
- Extensive gastric bypass (biliopancreatic diversion). In
this more complicated gastric bypass operation, portions of the stomach are removed. The
small pouch that remains is connected directly to the final segment of the small
intestine, thus completely bypassing both the duodenum and jejunum. Although this
procedure successfully promotes weight loss, it is not widely used because of the high
risk for nutritional deficiencies.
Gastric bypass operations that cause malabsorption and
restrict food intake produce more weight loss than restriction operations that only
decrease food intake. Patients who have bypass operations generally lose two-thirds of
their excess weight within 2 years.
The risks for pouch stretching, band erosion, breakdown of staple lines, and leakage of
stomach contents into the abdomen are about the same for gastric bypass as for vertical
banded gastroplasty. However, because gastric bypass operations cause food to skip the
duodenum, where most iron and calcium are absorbed, risks for nutritional deficiencies are
higher in these procedures. Anemia may result from malabsorption of vitamin B12 and iron
in menstruating women, and decreased absorption of calcium may bring on osteoporosis and
metabolic bone disease. Patients are required to take nutritional supplements that usually
prevent these deficiencies.
Gastric bypass operations also may cause "dumping syndrome," whereby stomach
contents move too rapidly through the small intestine. Symptoms include nausea, weakness,
sweating, faintness, and, occasionally, diarrhea after eating, as well as the inability to
eat sweets without becoming so weak and sweaty that the patient must lie down until the
symptoms pass.
The more extensive the bypass operation, the greater is the risk for complications and
nutritional deficiencies. Patients with extensive bypasses of the normal digestive process
require not only close monitoring, but also life-long use of special foods and
medications.
Explore Benefits and Risks
Surgery to produce weight loss is a serious undertaking.
Each individual should clearly understand what the proposed operation involves. Patients
and physicians should carefully consider the following benefits and risks:
Benefits:
- Immediately following surgery, most patients lose weight
rapidly and continue to do so until 18 to 24 months after the procedure. Although most
patients then start to regain some of their lost weight, few regain it all.
- Surgery improves most obesity-related conditions. For
example, in one study blood sugar levels of most obese patients with diabetes returned to
normal after surgery. Nearly all patients whose blood sugar levels did not return to
normal were older or had had diabetes for a long time.
Risks:
- Ten to 20 percent of patients who have weight-loss
operations require follow-up operations to correct complications. Abdominal hernias are
the most common complications requiring follow-up surgery. Less common complications
include breakdown of the staple line and stretched stomach outlets.
- More than one-third of obese patients who have gastric
surgery develop gallstones. Gallstones are clumps of cholesterol and other matter that
form in the gallbladder. During rapid or substantial weight loss a person's risk of
developing gallstones is increased. Gallstones can be prevented with supplemental bile
salts taken for the first 6 months after surgery.
- Nearly 30 percent of patients who have weight-loss surgery
develop nutritional deficiencies such as anemia, osteoporosis, and metabolic bone disease.
These deficiencies can be avoided if vitamin and mineral intakes are maintained.
- Women of childbearing age should avoid pregnancy until their
weight becomes stable because rapid weight loss and nutritional deficiencies can harm a
developing fetus.
Is the Surgery for You?
For patients who remain severely obese after nonsurgical
approaches to weight loss have failed, or for patients who have an obesity-related
disease, surgery may be the best next step. But for other patients, greater efforts toward
weight control, such as changes in eating habits, behavior modification, and increasing
physical activity, may be more appropriate.
Answers to the following questions may help in your decision to undergo surgery for weight
loss.
Are you:
- Unlikely to lose weight successfully with (further)
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 surgery, including need to chew well and inability
to eat large meals)?
- Aware of the potential for serious complications, the
associated dietary restrictions, and the occasional failures?
- Committed to lifelong medical follow-up?
Do you:
- Have a BMI of 40 or more?
- Have an obesity-related physical problem (such as body size
that interferes with employment, walking, or family function)?
- Have high-risk obesity-related health problems (such as
severe sleep apnea or obesity-related heart disease)?
Remember: There are no guarantees for any method, including
surgery, to produce and maintain weight loss. Success is possible only with your fullest
cooperation and commitment to behavioral change and medical follow-up--and this
cooperation and commitment should be carried out for the rest of your life.
Information provided by the
National Institutes of Health
Article Created: 1999-07-27 Article Updated: 2001-11-20
Each year, Medical College of Wisconsin physicians care for more than 180,000 patients, representing nearly 500,000 patient visits. Medical College physicians practice at Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital, the Milwaukee VA Medical Center, and many other hospitals and clinics in Milwaukee and southeastern Wisconsin.
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