Weight Loss Surgery Safer For Teens?
Bariatric Surgery Complications May Be Rarer In Teenagers Than Adults
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Trisha Leu, 17, who has lost 60 pounds since undergoing gastric band surgery in March, at her Wheeling, Ill., home, June 28, 2006. (AP)
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Esteban Varela, M.D., MPH, and colleagues conducted the study. Varela is an assistant professor of surgery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
Though controversial, bariatric surgery for adolescents appears to be "as safe" as weight loss surgery for adults, write Varela and
colleagues.
They reviewed data from 55,501 people who got bariatric surgery between 2002 and 2006 at 97 U.S. academic medical centers.
The vast majority of patients were adults. However, 309 patients were 12-18 years old.
About 2 percent of the youths were moderate-risk or high-risk patients, compared with about 6 percent of the adult patients.
There are various types of bariatric surgery. In this study, most patients got gastric bypass surgery, including 94 percent of adults and about 70 percent of adolescents.
During the gastric bypass operation, the surgeon creates a smaller stomach pouch that holds less food than a normal stomach. The food passes from the pouch, bypassing part of the small intestine, to the rest of the digestive system.
Bariatric Surgery Complications
In Varela's study, most patients — young or old — didn't have complications from their weight loss surgery.
Bariatric surgery complications occurred in 5.5 percent of the adolescent patients, compared with nearly 10 percent of adult patients. The study doesn't include details on those complications.
The study doesn't mean that bariatric surgery is trouble-free for adolescents. Weight loss surgery can have complications at any age.
Your doctor can help you weigh the risks of bariatric surgery and provide lifestyle tips for life after weight loss surgery.
Varela's study, presented yesterday in San Diego at the American Society for Bariatric Surgery's annual meeting, only included operations performed at certain academic medical centers.
In January, a government study showed that more than 121,000 bariatric surgeries were done in the U.S. in 2004, including 349 operations performed on youths aged 12-17.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Brunilda Nazario
© 2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- Most adults who are chronically obese, and are therefore candidates for bariatric surgery, have been obese since earlier years- mostly teenage years. They have tried for many years to lose weight by any and every method available. As a result, their bodies have had to sustain more damage as a result of that extra weight and the complications which it causes- adult onset diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, etc. The more medical issues you have going in to surgery, the more complications that you are prone to. This is probably the reason for the differences in complication rates.
Another reason to do the surgery at a younger age is to avoid all the above mentioned sequelae of chronoic obesity. If those medical problems can be avoided by doing the surgery at an earlier age, the surgery becomes more cost effective- saving the money to treat those medical complications down the line, rather than after you already develop the conditions. - Reply to this comment




