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. 1998 Dec;164(12):943-9.
doi: 10.1080/110241598750005129.

Biliary-intestinal bypass in the treatment of obesity: long term follow up

Affiliations

Biliary-intestinal bypass in the treatment of obesity: long term follow up

L Boman et al. Eur J Surg. 1998 Dec.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the long term outcome after biliary-intestinal bypass for morbid obesity.

Design: Retrospective study.

Setting: County hospital, Sweden.

Subjects: 120 consecutive patients operated on between 1977 and 1990.

Interventions: A variation of jejunoileal bypass in which the excluded bowel was anastomosed to the gallbladder.

Main outcome measures: Weight, concentrations of blood lipids and glucose in blood, results of liver function tests, reversal rates, and complications.

Results: The mean body mass index was reduced by 39% (from 42 kg/m2 to 26 kg/m2), serum cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations by more than 30%, and fasting blood glucose concentrations by 1 1%. There were no cases of irreversible hepatic failure, diabetes, deaths related to the operation, or progressive renal failure. The incidence of renal calculi increased by a ratio 2.3. The reversal rate/year was 2% (n = 20).

Conclusion: We conclude that biliary-intestinal bypass may be used to treat cases of obesity associated with seriously high blood lipid concentrations and where gastric restrictive operations are less suitable.

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