November 8, 2014
Latest Diet & Weight Management News
THURSDAY, Nov. 6, 2014 (HealthDay News) — People with type 2 diabetes who undergo a weight-loss procedure called laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery have a low risk for complications or death, according to a new study.
“The perception has been that gastric bypass is a very risky operation, but the reality is, it is as safe, if not safer, than many of the most commonly performed surgeries in America,” study co-author Dr. Ali Aminian, a clinical scholar of advanced metabolic and diabetes surgery at Cleveland Clinic, said in a clinic news release.
“The risk-to-benefit ratio of gastric bypass for diabetes and obesity is very favorable. There’s significant weight loss, diabetes improvement or remission, and a relatively low complication and mortality rate,” Aminian said.
“In addition, earlier intervention with metabolic surgery may eliminate the need for some later higher-risk procedures to treat cardiovascular complications of diabetes,” Aminian added.
The gastric bypass procedure shrinks the size of the stomach and enables food to bypass part of the small intestine, reducing the amount of food a person can eat at one time and also limiting the absorption of food.
Previous research has shown that gastric bypass can have benefits for diabetes patients within hours or days. In some cases, patients no longer require diabetes medications when they leave the hospital, the study authors said in the news release.
Laparoscopic gastric bypass was once considered a high-risk procedure, but this study finds that it is now as safe as common operations, such as gallbladder surgery, appendix removal and knee replacement.
The researchers at the Cleveland Clinic Bariatric and Metabolic Institute analyzed data from more than 16,500 patients with type 2 diabetes who had laparoscopic gastric bypass, and almost 67,000 diabetes patients who had a number of other types of surgeries.
The investigators found that the 30-day complication rate for gastric bypass patients was 3.4 percent, about the same as laparoscopic gallbladder surgery and hysterectomy. The 30-day death rate for gastric bypass patients was 0.30 percent, about the same as total knee replacement and one-tenth that of heart surgery.
The study was scheduled for presentation Thursday at the annual meeting of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery, in Boston. The data and conclusions of research presented at medical meetings should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
More studies on the long-term effects of laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery in diabetes patients are needed, the researchers noted.
— Robert Preidt
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SOURCE: Cleveland Clinic, news release, Nov. 6, 2014