ISSN: 2165-7904

Jornal de Obesidade e Terapia para Perda de Peso

Acesso livre

Nosso grupo organiza mais de 3.000 Séries de conferências Eventos todos os anos nos EUA, Europa e outros países. Ásia com o apoio de mais 1.000 Sociedades e publica mais de 700 Acesso aberto Periódicos que contém mais de 50.000 personalidades eminentes, cientistas de renome como membros do conselho editorial.

Periódicos de acesso aberto ganhando mais leitores e citações
700 periódicos e 15 milhões de leitores Cada periódico está obtendo mais de 25.000 leitores

Indexado em
  • Índice Copérnico
  • Google Scholar
  • Abra o portão J
  • Genâmica JournalSeek
  • Centro Internacional de Agricultura e Biociências (CABI)
  • RefSeek
  • Universidade Hamdard
  • EBSCO AZ
  • OCLC – WorldCat
  • Catálogo online SWB
  • Texto completo do CABI
  • Cabine direta
  • Publons
  • Fundação de Genebra para Educação e Pesquisa Médica
  • Euro Pub
  • Universidade de Bristol
  • publicado
  • ICMJE
Compartilhe esta página

Abstrato

Analysis for the Success Rate of Patients after Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy

Jose Baptista*, Vanessa Praxedes, Ana André, Edgar Rosa, Carlos Trindade and Luis Cortez

Background: Success rate of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (SG) depends on disease and patient characteristics that are yet to be fully established.
Objectives: To evaluate which patient characteristics influence the success of SG.
Setting: National bariatric reference centre at a Public Hospital.
Methods: A retrospective study was performed based on prospectively collected data of patients who had bariatric surgery at our institution, during a 5 year period. Patients with 12 or more months of follow-up were included. We analyzed data from 133 SG. Seventy-nine percent of the patients were female with a median age of 46 years, a median baseline Body Mass Index (BMI) of 41 kg/m2 and a mean of 2.5 out of 7 comorbidities.
Results: After the first year, the mean percentage Excess Weight Loss (%EWL) was 69.3%, the mean change in BMI was -11.8 kg/m2 and the mean % total body weight loss was 27.4%. Surgical success (%EWL ≥ 50%) was achieved in 82% of the patients, with significant improvement or resolution of comorbidities (follow-up rate 76%-88%). We found statistical significant differences with baseline BMI (p<0.0001), with OSA (p<0.0001), with age (p=0.04) and with the number of comorbidities (p=0.05). Higher baseline characteristics implicated less %EWL. The presence of HTN or arthropathy and being a volume eater or a sweet eater did not influence surgical success (χ2 ≤ 0.01).
Conclusions: SG is an effective surgical treatment for obesity. After one year the majority of patients had surgical success and major comorbidities were mitigated or resolved. Success was influenced by specific patient and disease characteristics.

Isenção de responsabilidade: Este resumo foi traduzido usando ferramentas de inteligência artificial e ainda não foi revisado ou verificado.