1 / 17

Bariatric Surgery Evaluation and Pre-Op Assessment

Bariatric Surgery Evaluation and Pre-Op Assessment. Cameron Siddens PGY-2. Overview. Bariatric Surgery Surgical Options Risks and Benefits Choosing the Patient Pre-Op Evaluation. Bariatric Surgery. Hendrikson 1954- First Surgery Mason 1960s- Gastric Bypass

xena
Télécharger la présentation

Bariatric Surgery Evaluation and Pre-Op Assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bariatric Surgery Evaluation and Pre-Op Assessment Cameron Siddens PGY-2

  2. Overview • Bariatric Surgery • Surgical Options • Risks and Benefits • Choosing the Patient • Pre-Op Evaluation

  3. Bariatric Surgery • Hendrikson 1954- First Surgery • Mason 1960s- Gastric Bypass • 1991 NIH Consensus Statement

  4. Roux-en-Y

  5. Gastric Sleeve

  6. Gastric Band(LAGB)

  7. Duodenal Switch (biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch)

  8. Benefits • Weight loss- 61% reduction after 3 years • Hypertension-61% become normotensive • DM2- 77% normalized A1C • DLD- 70% normalized lipids • OSA- 85% cure rate • Mortality- NEJM 2007 showed significant risk reduction from deaths caused by DM2, Cardiac Disease, HTN.

  9. Risks • Short Term Outcomes -conversion to open, bleeding, infection, anastomotic leak • Long Term Outcomes • -Vitamin deficiencies, cholelithasis, Dumping syndrome, Hernias, Stomach perforation • Mortality risk - patients >65 around 4%

  10. Who to Choose • Unlikely to lose weight or keep it off over the long term using other methods? • Well informed about the surgery and treatment effects? • Aware of the risks and benefits of surgery? • Ready to lose weight and improve his or her health? • Aware of how life may change after the surgery? (For example, patients need to adjust to side effects, such as the need to chew food well and the loss of ability to eat large meals.) • Aware of the limits on food choices, and occasional failures? • Committed to lifelong healthy eating and physical activity, medical follow-up, and the need to take extra vitamins and minerals?

  11. Criteria for Surgery • BMI is still the gold standard for objectively measuring obesity • BMI> or = 40 • BMI> or =35 + co morbidities(HTN, DM2, OSA) • BMI 30 to 35 -FDA approved in 2013 *All patients must have gone through life style modifications before surgical consideration.

  12. Pre-Op Eval • History and Physical Examination - rule out secondary causes -past procedures, reactions to anesthesia -recent infections -chronic conditions -social/psychological • Laboratory/Imaging Assessment -tailor it to your patient (cbc, cmp, U/A, TSH, cortisol, Coag’s, CXR, EKG)

  13. Pre-Op EVAL • Pulmonary Assessment -All patients referred for Bariatric Surgery will be considered “high-risk” given their obesity status -PFTs, CXR • Nutritional Assessment -Albumin <3.2

  14. Cardiac Evaluation • ACC and AHA recommend all patients undergo cardiac risk assessment for non-cardiac procedures. • 3 Main Factors: The Patient, exercise capacity and the Surgery • Surgery (low, intermediate, high risk) ~around 1-5% chance of Cardiac Event • +/- EKG, TTE depending on patient’s cardiac history

  15. Obesity Surgery Mortality Risk(OS-MRS) • OS-MRS is the first validated risk scoring system in bariatric surgery Obesity Surgery Mortality Risk Score SCORE Low 0-1 Intermediate 2-3 High 4-5

  16. Other Considerations • Know your patient • Insurance – BCBS, Medicare, Medicaid, Self-Pay • Post Surgery and Beyond -HTN, DM, DLD, GERD, nutritional defiencies

  17. Sources • Uptodate • NIDDK website • Fajnwaks P, Ramirez A, Martinez P, Arias E, Szomstein S, Rosenthal R (May 2008). "P46: Outcomes of bariatric surgery in patients with BMI less than 35 kg/m2". Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases4 (3): 329 • MODIFIED FROM GOODNEY PP, SIEWERS AE, STUKEL TA, LUCAS FL, WENNBERG DE, BIRKMEYER JD. IS SURGERY GETTING SAFER?NATIONAL TRENDS IN OPERATIVE MORTALITY. J AM COLL SURG 2002; 195:219–227. • BARIATRIC SURGERY DATA FROM FLUM DR, SALEM L, ELROD JA, DELLINGER LP, CHEADLE A, CHAN L. EARLY MORTALITY AMONG MEDICAREBENEFICIARIES UNDERGOING BARIATRIC SURGICAL PROCEDURES. JAMA 2005; 294:1903–1908. • Macpherson DS, Lofgren RP. Outpatient internal medicine preoperative evaluation: a randomized clinical trial. Med Care. 1994;32:498–507. • Gastrointestinal surgery for severe obesity: National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement. Am J ClinNutr 1992;55:Suppl 2:615S-619S • The Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery (LABS) Consortium. Perioperative safety in the longitudinal assessment of bariatric surgery. N Engl J Med 2009;361:445-454 • ACC/AHA 2007 Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation and Care for Noncardiac Surgery

More Related