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Gastric
Bypass Surgery
Gastric Bypass
Surgery via the Roux-en-Y procedure is generally considered to be the best
surgical procedure for the treatment of morbid obesity. Weight loss is
achieved by reducing the functional portion of the stomach to a pouch one
ounce or less in size, and by creating a stoma, a small opening between
the stomach and the intestine.
After the gastric bypass procedure, a small size of the stomach pouch causes the patient to have a sensation
of fullness after eating only a small portion of food. The small stoma
delays stomach emptying, making the sensation of fullness last longer.
These are called the Restrictive components of the procedure.
The limb of intestine coming down from the small pouch is called the Roux
limb. The limb of intestine coming down from the bypassed portion of the
stomach can be called the Biliary or Bypassed limb. The remaining portion
of the intestine is called the Common Channel.

Illustration of Gastric Bypass Surgery
Procedure
Food does not pass down the
Bypassed limb, only the Roux limb and the Common Channel. The longer the
Bypassed limb, the less the length of intestine actively working to absorb
nutrients from the food that is eaten. Digestive juices that normally help
absorb nutrients from the food enter the Bypassed limb from the larger
portion of the stomach, the liver, and the pancreas, and pass down the
Bypassed limb to the Common Channel. These juices do not mix with the food
while it is passing down the Roux limb. The longer the Roux limb, the
longer the portion of intestine trying to absorb nutrients without the
benefit of these digestive juices. Both of these changes result in less
absorption of nutrients and contribute to weight loss, and are called the
Malabsorptive components of the procedure.
Exactly how the operation
is done for an individual patient depends on their individual anatomy,
their general health status, whatever changes they may have from prior
surgeries, and what they hope to be achieve from the operation. The
stomach compartments can be completely divided from each other or simply
partitioned, the small stomach pouch and the intestinal limbs may be
connected to each other with either staples or sutures, a small band may
be placed around the stomach pouch, and the two intestinal limbs may be
made longer or shorter.
Patients will be on a clear liquid diet for the first few days immediately
following gastric bypass surgery, and then advance to a pureed diet. These foods will be
very soft, so as to pass through the small, newly formed pouch and stoma.
One of the main issues during this period will be adequate fluid intake,
and dehydration can be a problem for patients recovering from this
surgery. We will ask patients to take in at least 32 ounces of liquid a
day before leaving the Gastric Bypass Surgery Center.
Approximately one month after the gastric bypass surgery the patients can expect to advance
to a transitional diet. They begin to take more regular table foods, but
will often still go back to eating the pureed foods that they have
tolerated well. They will still be learning how to eat right, including
chewing food carefully, learning to drink most of their liquids between
rather than with meals, and learning that eating the wrong foods, such as
sweets or fatty foods, can make them ill.
Patients experience the most rapid weight loss during this period. They
are often thrilled to see the weight coming off, sometimes at the rate of
20 pounds a month, but it is not an easy time. Patients feel the loss of
calories taken in, and are sometimes low in energy. Their small pouch will
make them uncomfortable when they eat too much or too fast. They may have
diarrhea, which can usually be controlled by avoiding certain foods or by
taking medication. They may experience hair loss, though the hair usually
begins to grow back within a few months.

At 6
months after the gastric bypass surgery the patients will probably be on their long-term maintenance diet,
which is more or less what and how they will eat for the rest of their
lives. The maintenance diet for the most part consists of regular table
foods, but in small portions. Most patients describe their meals as child
sized, and they often do not finish what they are served. The patients
generally become comfortable eating these small meals, and almost always
say the loss of the ability to enjoy large meals or certain foods is more
than compensated for by being able to successfully control their weight.
Patients may expect to lose approximately 70% of their excess body weight
during the first 2 years following surgery. Sometimes a weight regain of
about 10% is seen between years 2 and 5, perhaps because the small pouch
increases several ounces in size, and perhaps because the patients learn
how to take in extra calories without making themselves sick.
The surgical community involved in gastric bypass surgery is very concerned
about this late 10% or any other weight regain. There is a national effort
underway to keep patients involved in support groups and in follow-up with
their doctors to reinforce what they had been taught after surgery, and
what had worked for them the first 2 years. Long term success with this
operation requires a team effort of both the patients and their doctors.
Gastric Bypass Surgery patients take in less food and absorb less of what they
take in, making them at risk for developing nutritional deficiencies.
They must also make a life long commitment to taking vitamin, mineral, and
possibly protein supplements, and may become very ill if they don't. These
supplements will cost about $30.00 a month and can be purchased almost anywhere.
Life after gastric bypass
surgery

a division
of Renaissance Healthcare Systems
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Toll Free at (800) 664-9177
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