Publication | Open Access
Advantages of bariatric medicine for individualized prevention and treatments: multidisciplinary approach in body culture and prevention of obesity and diabetes
27
Citations
19
References
2011
Year
NutritionBariatric SurgerySleeve GastrectomyMultidisciplinary ApproachGastroenterologySurgeryBariatric MedicineObesity TreatmentObesity PreventionObesityBody CompositionGastric BypassPublic HealthSurgical ComplicationsBody CultureLifestyle ModificationHealth PromotionObesity ManagementOutcomes ResearchMetabolic SurgeryMetabolic ComplicationDiabetesMedicineAnesthesiology
Bariatric surgery is a component of the multimodal treatment of obesity, which consists of multidisciplinary evaluation and diagnosis, conservative and surgical treatments, and lifelong follow-up care. The current guideline extends the BMI-based spectrum of indications that was previously proposed (BMI greater than 40 kg/m(2), or greater than 35 kg/m(2) with secondary diseases) by eliminating age limits, as well as most of the contraindications. A prerequisite for surgery is that a structured, conservative weight-loss program has failed or is considered to be futile. Type 2 diabetes is now considered an independent indication under clinical study conditions for patients whose BMI is less than 35 kg/m(2) (metabolic surgery). The standard laparoscopic techniques are gastric banding, gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, and biliopancreatic diversion. The choice of procedures is based on knowledge of the results, long-term effects, complications, and individual circumstances. Structured lifelong follow-up should be provided and should, in particular, prevent metabolic deficiencies.
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