Biliary-intestinal bypass in the treatment of obesity: long term follow up.
Palavras-chave
Resumo
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the long term outcome after biliary-intestinal bypass for morbid obesity.
METHODS
Retrospective study.
METHODS
County hospital, Sweden.
METHODS
120 consecutive patients operated on between 1977 and 1990.
METHODS
A variation of jejunoileal bypass in which the excluded bowel was anastomosed to the gallbladder.
METHODS
Weight, concentrations of blood lipids and glucose in blood, results of liver function tests, reversal rates, and complications.
RESULTS
The mean body mass index was reduced by 39% (from 42 kg/m2 to 26 kg/m2), serum cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations by more than 30%, and fasting blood glucose concentrations by 1 1%. There were no cases of irreversible hepatic failure, diabetes, deaths related to the operation, or progressive renal failure. The incidence of renal calculi increased by a ratio 2.3. The reversal rate/year was 2% (n = 20).
CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that biliary-intestinal bypass may be used to treat cases of obesity associated with seriously high blood lipid concentrations and where gastric restrictive operations are less suitable.