Guest guest Posted September 5, 2002 Report Share Posted September 5, 2002 I subscribe to a service that sends me abstracts on some 30 obesity and nutrition related medical journals. This just came in on the topic of long term effects of the adjustable gastric banding operation. As I read it, the average result was a reduction of the Body Mass Index (BMI) from 42 to 30. The article calls this a " good " result. That appears to be a matter of perspective. A BMI of 30 is clinically defined as " obese. " I am neither for or against the lap band procedure. I am just passing the information along. Ray Hooks For WLS nutrition info, visit http://www.bariatricsupplementsystem.com " Obes Surg 2002 Aug;12(4):564-8 " Long-term results of laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding for the treatment of morbid obesity. Belachew M, Belva PH, Desaive C. State University of Liege, Free University of Brussels, CHR Huy, Belgium. " BACKGROUND: Since the first laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (LAGB) operation on September 1, 1993, there have been important publications related to this procedure. The majority of the articles reported surgical technique and short-term results. Long-term results of LAGB are lacking. The authors report long-term data (at least 4 years) from 3 major bariatric centers in Belgium that perform LAGB routinely. METHODS: The 3 centers applied the same patient selection criteria, the same standard surgical technique, the same laparoscopic band (Lap-Band) and the same follow-up program. 763 patients have been enrolled. Sex ratio was 22% male/78% female. Mean age was 34 years, and mean preoperative BMI was 42 kg/m2. RESULTS: The follow-up rate was 90%, and the minimum follow-up time was 4 years. The average BMI after 4 years was 30 kg/m2. Early complications were: gastric perforation 4 (0.5%); large bowel perforation 1 (0.1%); bleeding 1 (0.1%); and conversion to open 10 (1.3%). Late complications were: erosion 7 (0.9%); total food intolerance 59 (8%); access port problems 20 (2.5%); re-operations 80 (11.1%); death 1 (0.1%). " CONCLUSION: Long-term results of LAGB have been rarely reported, although publications on the procedure are copious. Our long-term data found that BMI evolution is good, the complication and re-operation rates are acceptable and the overall long-term results of the Lap-Band system are good. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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