City
Epaper

Study analyses pros, cons of common weight-loss surgeries

By ANI | Updated: October 7, 2021 13:20 IST

A research team, led by the University of Michigan Health, has found that of the most common weight-loss surgeries, sleeve gastrectomy is safer than gastric bypass.

Open in App

A research team, led by the University of Michigan Health, has found that of the most common weight-loss surgeries, sleeve gastrectomy is safer than gastric bypass.

The findings of the study were published in the journal 'JAMA Surgery'.

Five years after each procedure, patients who'd undergone a sleeve gastrectomy, which involves removing part of the stomach, had a lower risk of death and complications than those who had chosen to have their stomachs divided into pouches through gastric bypass surgery.

However, gastric bypass was superior in one area: Sleeve gastrectomy patients were more likely to need follow-up surgery, which could indicate that gastric bypass is more effective long-term, even though it carries more risks.

"It's really important for patients to understand the risk of significant issues like death, complications, and hospitalisation after these two procedures because that helps inform the decision about which type of bariatric surgery to choose," said Ryan Howard, MD, a general surgery resident at Michigan Medicine and the first author of the study.

"You could envision a scenario where a patient is averse to that risk, and so even if a sleeve gastrectomy doesn't confer as much weight loss, they may want it because it's the safer surgery," Howard added.

"On the other hand, if a patient has a lot of comorbidities, and a bypass is going to afford a better clinical benefit, maybe that risk is worth it," Howard concluded.

Short-term studies have shown that sleeve gastrectomy is the safer choice, but this study is one of the largest to analyse the outcomes of the two operations over a longer period of time.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: University of MichiganRyan howard
Open in App

Related Stories

HealthHigh blood sugar linked to faster loss of brain power in stroke survivors: Study

TechnologyStudy: Unique treatment attacks blood clots without raising blood risk

HealthResearchers reveal gene in Down syndrome patients causes improper development of neurons

HealthBariatric surgery may reverse diabetes complications for people with obesity: Study

HealthStudy may help find patients who need liver transplants

Health Realted Stories

HealthKozhikode Medical College refutes report of 5 deaths due to inhaling smoke

HealthUS CDC reports 216 child deaths this flu season

HealthSmart lockdown enforced in Pakistan amid rising mpox cases

HealthMalawi confirms sixth mpox case

HealthNamibia records over 56,000 malaria cases since December: Health Minister