Bariatric surgery
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Introduction
Surgery as a treatment for obesity
For many obese patients, diets and lifestlye changes do not work in long term. Bariatric surgery has proved to be the only effective method in the long term treatment of obesity.
How surgery works
Bariatric surgery works by altering the anatomy of the gastrointestinal tract, thus: limiting the volume of food the stomach can hold, interfering with the absorption of calories, and by interfering with orexigenic and anorexigenic signalling between the gut, adipose tissues and the brain.
Bariatric Surgical Procedures
Restrictive Surgery
Restrictive surgery reduces the size of the stomach causing decreased hunger and an increased satiety following ingestion of smaller amounts of food. Surgical procedures include gastric banding, where an adjustable band is clipped just below the cardia of the stomach creating a small gastric pouch above(kerrigan, le roux). Other forms of restrictive surgery includes gastroplasty and sleeve gasrectomy.
Malabsorptive Surgery
Jejuno-ileal bypass, duodenojejunal bypass and biolopancreatic bypass (with or without duodenal switch)
Combination Surgery
Combination surgery combines the benefits of both restrictive and restrictive surgery. The most common bariatric procedure in the US is the Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGP).
Duodenal switch
Surgical Effects Regarding Gut Hormones
Hindgut Hormones
Peptide tryosine tryosine (PYY) is a peptide beloging to the neuropeptide Y (NPY) family (broberger). PYY is normally released in proportion to carolie intake and has recently been described as an important feedback molecule in the Gut-Brain axis. Following bypass and restrictive surgerys, basal and postprandial PYY levels have been shown to incease (Ashrafian). In addition basal PYY levels have been shown to increase following illial resection and patients have been reported to have lost weight(broberger). As well as being a satiety signal PPY has also been suggested to increase energy expendature(murphy).
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), acts similarly too PYY, acting in the hypothalamus as an anorexigenic signal. The literature shows the majority of patients following foregut bypass surgery show a marked increase in basal and postprandial GLP-1. Midgut bypass also shows an increase in GLP-1 however studies on restrictive surgery have shown either no change or a decrease in GLP-1 basal levels. Of specific interest GLP-1 has been shown to improve postpriandal glycaemic control, being a potent incretin mimetic. A GLP-1 agonist, exenatide has not yet been accepted for use as an anti-obesity drug; however it is already being used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Midgut Hormones
Neurotensin
Foregut Hormones
Ghrelin, Cholecystokinin, Gastrin
Surgical Treatment as Opposed to Diet
Future Possibilites
Conclusion
References
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