Type of Surgery
Information

Last updated: 11/24/2009
Position Statement on Sleeve Gastrectomy as a Bariatric Procedure -http://www.asmbs.org/Newsite07/resources/asmbs_items.htm
...Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Overweight and Obesity - http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/Obesity/
NHLBI Obesity Education Initiative - http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/obesity/prctgd_c.pdf
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The video provides a detailed look at the bariatric surgery known as sleeve gastrectomy. The narrator explains how sleeve gastrectomy leads to weight loss for the bariatric patient.
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Sleeve gastrectomy is a surgical weight-loss procedure in which the stomach is reduced to about 15% of its original size, by surgical removal of a large portion of the stomach, following the major curve. The open edges are then attached together (often with surgical staples) to form a sleeve or tube with a banana shape. The procedure permanently reduces the size of the stomach. The procedure is performed laparoscopically and is not reversible.
Sleeve gastrectomy is usually performed on extremely obese patients, with a body mass index of 40 or more, where the risk of performing a gastric bypass or duodenal switch procedure may be too large. A two-stage procedure is performed: the first is a sleeve gastrectomy, and the second is a conversion into a gastric bypass or duodenal switch. Patients usually lose a large quantity of their excess weight after the first sleeve gastrectomy procedure alone, but if weight loss ceases the second step is performed.
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The number of Gastric Bypass surgeries climbed more than 600% from 1993 to 2003.
From: Bariatric-Surgery.info
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