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The Normal Digestive Process |
Normally, as food moves along the digestive tract (see figure
1), 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.
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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:
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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.
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 percent) 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.
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
Risks
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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:
Do you:
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 followup--and this cooperation and commitment should be carried out for the rest of your life. |
Additional Reading |
Gastrointestinal Surgery for Severe Obesity.
Consensus Statement, NIH Consensus Development Conference, March
25-27, 1991; Public Health Service, National Institutes of
Health, Office of Medical Applications of Research, Building 1,
Room 260, Bethesda, MD 20892. This publication, written for
health professionals, summarizes the findings of a conference
discussing treatments for severe obesity. Available from WIN.
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