Title: Complications of Bariatric Surgery
1- Complications of Bariatric Surgery
- Eran Sadot, MD.
2 - Mortality(30d)
- - Overall 0.1-1
- - Restrictive 0.1
- - GBP 0.5
- - BPDDS 1.1
- - Higher Male, Elderly, Surgeon experience?
- Buchwald, et al. Bariatric surgery a systematic
review and meta-analysis. JAMA 2004. - Maggard, et al. Meta-analysis surgical
treatment of obesity. Ann Intern Med 2005.
3- Focus RYGB, LAGB.
- 3 categories
- 1. Early complications (1-6wks).
- 2. Late complications(7wks-12mo).
- 3. Very late complications.
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5- Early complications (1-6wks)
6Early Complications - LAGB
- Acute Stomal Stenosis (LAGB) 6
- - Etlg Perigastric fat, tissue edema.
- - PW NV, food intolerance.
- - Dx UGIS.
- - Tx conservativeif persist-gtrevision/removal.
- - Prevention perigastric fat removal.
-
7Early Complications - RYGB
- Pulmonary Embolus 0-3.3
- Accounts for 30 of mortality.
- Prevent pneumatic compression devices subq
heparin. - Dx difficult.
- Tx when high level of clinical suspicion.
- Bleeding 0.6-4
- Early Bleeding
- Etlg d/t staple lines / surgical anastamosis
- Mainly intraluminal
- PWMelena, HR?, HGB?
- Self limited
- Tx PC, reverse anticoagulation, EGD, Surgery.
8Early Complications - RYGB
- Leaks 2-3
- Account for 50 of mortality.
- PW fever, HR?, resp. fail.
- Dx UGIS, CT.
- Tx A. Urgent Exploratory surgery
- 1. Irrigation.
- 2. Repair of the defect.
- 3. Wide ext. drainage.
- B. Abx.
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10Early Complications - RYGB
- Gastric remnant distention rare
- Potentially lethal (distention-gtrupture-gtperitonit
is) - Etlg Blind pouch distention d/t ileus or mech.
obstruction. - PW pain, hiccups, LUQ tympany, shoulder pain,
abdominal distension, tachycardia, or SOB. - X-Ray large gastric air bubble.
- Tx decompression with gastrostomy
(OR/Percutaneous)
11Early Complications - RYGB
- Wound Infection
- Lap 3-4
- Open 10-15
- PW fever, fluctuance, erythema, or drainage.
- Tx open and/or ID, if cellulitis-gt Abx.
12- Late complications(7wks-12mo)
13Late Complications - LAGB
- Band Erosion 0-3
- Etlg gast wall ischemia (tight band, band buckle
trauma). - PW loss of restriction, fever, NV, Port site
infection (B.K). - Dx EGD.
- Tx removal.
- Band slippage/prolapse 2-14
- PW gastric obst (food intol, epig pain, NV).
- Dx UGIS (band malposition, dilated/prolapsed
gast. pouch) - Tx surgical reposition/removal.
14Late Complications - LAGB
- Port/tube Malfunction 0.4-7
- Etlg disconnection, port flips, leakage.
- PW weight regain.
- Tx surg repair/exchange hardware.
- Pouch/esophageal dilation (pseudoachalasia
synd) 10 - Etlg tight band, food intake?, binge eating.
- Tx band deflation, band relocation/removal.
- Esophagitis rare
- Tx deflation, acid supp., removal.
15Late Complications - LAGB
- Port Infection 0.3-9
- 1st R/O Band erosion via EGD.
- Tx port removal.
16Late Complications - RYGB
- Bleeding 0.6-4
- Late Bleeding rare
- Etlg PUD
- Tx conservative, partial gastrectomy.
- Stomal Stenosis 6-20
- Etlg tissue ischemia (poor perfusion, tension).
- PW 6-7wks post op, NV, dysphagia, GE reflux,
inability to tolerate oral intake. - Dx UGIS, EGD.
- Tx Balloon dilation, surgical revision(lt0.05).
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18Late Complications - RYGB
- Marginal Ulcers 0.6-13
- Etlg poor tissue perfusion, anastomotic tension,
staple line disruption or gastrogastric fistulas
(-gt chronic exposure of the gastrojej to acid),
or NSAID use. - Dx EGD.
- Tx
- D/C NSAID, PPI, Stop Smoking.
- Surgery revision (truncal vagotomy) rare.
19Late Complications - RYGB
- Dumping Syndrome 50
- PW nausea, shaking, diaphoresis, diarrhea
shortly after eating. - Tx Dietary prohibitions.
- Cholelithiasis
- w/o proplxs 38 (40 symp)
- 6mo post op w ursodeoxycholic acid 2
- Risk factors obesity, rapid weight loss.
- No benefit for simultaneous cholecystectomy for
incidental gallstones at the time of RYGB (unless
symptomatic). - Villegas et al. Obes Surg 2004.
- Hamad, GG et al. Obes Surg 2003.
20Late Complications - RYGB
- Choledocholithiasis uncommon
- Dx US, MRCP.
- Tx
- ERCP cannot be performed routinely.
- PTC.
- Surgery.
- Incisional Hernia Lap 0-1.8 Open 24.
- PW enlarging bulge, pain, or obstructive
symptoms. - Tx
- Postpone repair until significant weight loss (gt1
year). - Indications for early surgical repair include
significant pain, bowel obstruction, and rapid
enlargement of the hernia.
21Late Complications - RYGB
- Internal Hernias 0-5
- Three potential areas of internal herniation are
between - Mesenteric defect at the jejuno-jejunostomy.
- The space between the transverse mesocolon and
Roux-limb mesentery (Peterson's hernias). - The defect in transverse mesocolon if the
Roux-limb is passed retrocolic most common. - If a patient is suspected of an internal hernia,
urgent surgical exploration is indicated ! - Prevention all previously mentioned defects are
usually closed.
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24Late Complications - RYGB
- Failure to lose weight
- d/t maladaptive eating patterns.
- Weight regain up to 20
- noncompliant eating and other behavioral habits.
- functional gastrogastric fistula
- Dx UGIS.
- Tx surg rep. Endo stent/suture.
- Dilation of gastric pouch or the gastrojej.
anastomosis - d/t excessive food intake.
- Endoscopic suture reduction.
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27Very Late Complications
- Nutritional Defficiency
- After RYGB
- Bloomberg RD, Fleishman A, Nalle JE, Herron DM,
Kini S. Nutritional deficiencies following
bariatric surgery what have we learned? Obes
Surg. 2005. Review. - Poitou Bernert C. Nutritional deficiency after
gastric bypass diagnosis, prevention and
treatment. Diabetes Metab. 2007. Review. - Shah M. Review long-term impact of bariatric
surgery on body weight, comorbidities, and
nutritional status. J Clin Endocrinol Metab.
2006. Review. - Alvarez-Leite JI. Nutrient deficiencies secondary
to bariatric surgery. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab
Care. 2004. Review. - Fujioka K. Follow-up of nutritional and metabolic
problems after bariatric surgery. Diabetes Care.
2005. Review.
28Nutritional Defficiency
- The mechanisms
- Insufficient intake d/t dietary restrictions and
food intolerance (meat, milk, fiber) - The exclusion of the stomachs inferior part
results in a decreased secretion of gastric acid,
sometimes required to absorb vitamins and
minerals (B12 and iron). - Duodeno-jejunal malabsorption related to the
short-circuit. The duodenum is the main
absorption site for calcium, iron and vitamin B1
(thiamin). - Asynergia occurs between the bolus and the
bilio-pancreatic secretions in the common portion
of the intestine.
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31Proteins
- Albumin lt3.5 g/dL.
- Mechanism
- 50 duodenal absorption
- Intake def (intolerance to meat)
- Decreased pancreatic enzyme secretion
- Contact time?
- Clinical deterioration of general state of
health, muscle weakness with loss of muscle mass,
anomalies of the skin, mucosa and nails (alopecy,
striated nails, dermatitis, hypopigmentation),
edema. - Prevalence
- Distal RYGB 6-13
- Standard RYGB (Shorter R limb lt150cm) none.
- Peak incidence 1-2yr post op.
32Vitamin B12 (cobalamin)
- lt250 pg/ml.
- Mechanism
- ?acid secretion (cleavage B12 food proteins).
- Delayed/no link to IF (parietal c.).
- Schilling test after RYGB abnrl in 50 of B12
def. - Prevalence (no pre-op def. , despite advised
MVI) - From 1yr post op. 12-70.
- In the first 2 yr 25.
- Post-op MVI use was shown to prevent folate and
B12 deficiency when taken regularly. - Clinical Macrocytosis 0.8. Megaloblastic
anemia rare. No neurologic symp.
33Vitamin B9 (folates)
- lt3 ng/ml
- Mechanism
- ?dietary intake (fruits and vegetables).
- Because folates may be absorbed throughout the
whole intestine. - Prevalence (no pre-op deff. , despite advised
MVI) - 20 at 1 yr.
- Post-op MVI use was shown to prevent folate and
B12 deficiency when taken regularly. - Clinical NTD, Anemia, apathy, fatigue,
headaches, insomnia,, weakness, Diarrhea, loss of
appetite.
34Vitamin B1 (thiamin)
- Mechanism
- Absorbed in the duodenum
- ?intake (fruits, meat, cereals..)
- Vomiting
- Prevalence
- 1
- No def. when MVI
- Clinical
- CVS CHF
- Neuro Wernicke's encephalopathy, confusion,
irritability, memory loss, nervousness, numbness
of hands and feet, pain sensitivity, poor
coordination, weakness. - GI Constipation, intestinal disturbances, loss
of appetite - In all cases - administration of IV Vit B1
(50100 mg) corrects the deficit.
35Liposoluble vitamins (A, E, K)
- Mechanism ?fat breakdown(limited/short time with
biliary sec.) - Prevalence
- very low after RYGB.
- BPD(4yr)
- A-69, K-68, E-4.
- Despite MVI.
- Clinical (BPD)
- Vit A - night blindness or ocular xerosis.
- Vit E non.
- Vit K non.
- Prudence recommends that patients taking
anticoagulants (antivitamin K) must be closely
monitored !
36Calcium and vitamin D
- Mechanism
- Ca ? intake, ?absorption (duodenum prox jej).
- Vit D ?absorption (lipid malabsorption).
- HyperPTH Ca ? -gtPTH? -gthyperPTH-gt bone loss .
- Prevalence
- Distal RYGB
- Ca 10 at 2yr
- Vit D 51 at 2yr
- BPD
- Ca 25-50
- Vit D 17-50
- HyperPTH
- RYGB ?risk in post menopausal.
- BPD 69 at 4 yr , 3 ? bone resorption.
- Clinical osteoporosis, osteomalacia.
37Iron Anemia
- Iron deficiencies are the most frequent
deficiencies after RYGB. - Mechanism
- ?intake (red meat).
- ? HCL -gt ? transformation ferric form (Fe3) to
ferrous form (Fe2), which is the absorbable
form. - ? absorbed in the duodenum.
- Prevalence (despite MVI)
- at 2 yr 33
- ? 50 among women of childbearing age.
- Anemia
- Def. anemias (vitamin B12, iron, folates) 30.
- Microcytic anemia in 63 of patients with an
iron deficit - Other Clinical tinnitus, hair loss.
38Potassium and magnesium
- Halverson JD. Am Surg 1986
- 56 hypokalemia with diuretic.
- 34 hypomagnesemia.
- Amaral JF. Ann Surg 1985
- 6.3 severe hypokalemia (lt3).
- No hypomagnesemia.
-
39Zinc
- The absorption of zinc is dependent on the
absorption of lipids which is reduced after RYGB. - Prevalence
- BPD 10-50.
- RYGB rare.
- Clinical
- Hair loss is frequently observed among women 3 -
6 mo after the RYGB. - Mechanisms iron, protein and zinc deficiencies,
post surgical stress and significant weight loss. - Only one study described an improvement of
alopecia after treatment with high zinc sulfate
supplements.
40Selenium
- Only in BPD
- 3-14.5
- No clinical repercussion.
- Potential Symptoms
- Increased incidence of cancer.
- Pancreatic insufficiency.
- Immune impairment.
- Liver impairment
- Male sterility.
41- Diagnosis
- of the deficiencies
-
- nutritional Follow-up
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44- Prevention and treatment
- of the nutritional deficiencies
- after RYGB
45- No controlled trial exists to determine the type
of supplements and the dosages to be prescribed
after RYGB. - The majority of the reviews published on
post-RYGB deficiencies recommend a multivitamin
supplement providing 100 of the RDA.
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48Pregnancy
- Iron def. anemia prematurity, LBW.
- Vit D def. Rickets, Neonatal hypoCa.
- Iodine def. Goiter, intellectual impairment.
- FA def. NTD, Cleft palate.
- An increase in cases of malformations of the
neural tube was reported - Haddow JE. Neural tube defects after gastric
bypass. Lancet 1986. - Knudsen LB. Gastric bypass, pregnancy, and neural
tube defects. Lancet 1986. - Martin L. Gastric bypass surgery as maternal risk
factor for neural tube defects. Lancet 1988. - Ladipo OA. Nutrition in pregnancy mineral and
vitamin supplements. Am J Clin Nutr 2000.
49- It is recommended that women wait approximately
at least 18 months after surgery before beginning
a pregnancy. - There is no data on the monitoring and the
supplements to be prescribed for pregnant women
after RYGB.
50Take Home
- Bariatric surgery can be life-saving for the
right patient. - Attention to adequate nutrition and vitamin
supplementation is key. - Lifelong monitoring is essential !