1 / 26

What Is Obesity?

What Is Obesity?. A life-long, progressive, life-threatening, costly, genetically-related, multi-factorial disease of excess fat storage with multiple co-morbidities . ASBS. What Is Morbid Obesity?.

zack
Télécharger la présentation

What Is Obesity?

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. What Is Obesity? • A life-long, progressive, life-threatening, costly, genetically-related, multi-factorial disease of excess fat storage with multiple co-morbidities ASBS

  2. What Is Morbid Obesity? • Clinically severe obesity at which point serious medical conditions occur as a direct result of the obesity • Defined as >200% of ideal weight, >100 lb overweight, or a Body mass index of 40

  3. Obesity and Mortality Risk 2.5 2.0 MortalityRatio 1.5 1.0 VeryLow VeryHigh Moderate Low Moderate High 0 20 25 30 35 40 BMI Gray DS. Med Clin North Am. 1989;73(1):1–13.

  4. Type II Diabetes Hyperlipidemia Hypertension Cardiac Disease CAD/CHF/LVH Respiratory Disease Sleep apnea Obesity hypoventilation syndrome Degenerative arthritis Depression Pseudotumor cerebri GERD Nephrotic syndrome Pre-eclampsia Infertility Infectious complications Stress incontinence Venous stasis ulcers Hernias Obesity Related Co-Morbidities

  5. Medical Co-Morbidities Resolved after Bariatric Surgery Wittgrove AC,Clark GW. Laparoscopic Gastric bypass roux-n-y-500 patients. Obes Surg 2000. And others.

  6. Non-Medical Co-Morbidities • Physical • Economic • Psychological • Social

  7. Why Surgery? • Diet and exercise are not effective long term in the morbidly obese • Surgery is an accepted and effective approach • Medical co-morbidities are improved/resolved • Surgical risk is acceptable vs. risk of long-term obesity

  8. NIH Consensus Conference 1991 • Surgery is an accepted and effective approach that provides consistent, permanent weight loss for morbidly obese patients • Surgery indicated in patients with: • BMI of 40 or over • BMI of 35-40 with significant co-morbidity • documented dietary attempts ineffective

  9. Who Is a Surgical Candidate? • Meets NIH criteria • No endocrine cause of obesity • Acceptable operative risk • Understands surgery and risks • Absence of drug or alcohol problem • No uncontrolled psychological conditions • Consensus after bariatric team evaluation: • Surgeon/Dietician/Psychologist/Consultant • Dedicated to life-style change and follow-up

  10. Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass • Combination • Most frequently performed bariatric procedure in the US • First done in 1967 • Laparoscopically since 1993 • 60-70% EBW 14yr follow-up ASBS

  11. How Does the Roux-en-Y Work? • Surgery factors: • restriction of meal size • “dumping syndrome” • some malabsorption • decreased appetite • Patient factors: • calorie intake • calorie expenditure

  12. Results of Gastric Bypass* • Longest and most thorough follow-up • Significant and durable weight loss • Control of adult onset diabetes mellitus • Control of hypertension • Long term improvement in health and physical functioning *Results achieved in most but not all cases. Degree of improvements vary by individual

  13. Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding • Restrictive • Good results in Europe and Australia • Inamed Lap Band™ FDA approved 6/01 • 40-55% EBW Loss

  14. How does the Band work? Surgery Factors: • Restriction of meal size • Decreased appetite Patient Factors: • Decreased calorie intake • Increased calorie expenditure

  15. Advantages of Laparoscopy • Fewer wound complications/infection • Decreased rate of incisional hernias • Less pain and faster recovery • Surgeon has better view of the anatomy • Quicker return to work/activities • Shorter hospitalization Nguyen 2001, Wittgrove 2000, Schauer 2000, Watson 1997

  16. Hospital Course • Laparoscopic Bypass 2-3 days • Open Bypass 4-7 days • Gastric Band overnight stay Swallow study performed day 1-3 Liquid diet started Home when able to tolerate 3-4 oz/hour

  17. Results of Bariatric Surgery • Weight loss • Reduction or improvement in co-morbidities • Increased longevity • Improved Quality of Life • health • social • personal • work

  18. Lifetime supplements are necessary to prevent… • Iron Deficiency Anemia • Folate Deficiency • Vitamin B-12 Deficiency

  19. Complications of Gastric Bypass • Early complications: • intestinal leakage • acute gastric remnant dilatation • obstruction • cardiopulmonary • MI, PE, pneumonia, atelectasis • Late complications: • anastomotic stricture (5–10%) • anemia, B12 deficiency, Ca deficiency Chapin 1996

  20. How are good results achieved? • Follow ASBS recommendations • Surgeon and Hospital commitment • Dedicated bariatric team • Comprehensive care • Lifelong follow up • Database management

  21. Weight Loss Program Team • Surgeon • Nurse Practicioner • Bariatric Coordinator • Registered Dietician • Clinical psychologist • Exercise Specialist • Office support staff

  22. Will My Insurance Pay for This Procedure? • Each insurance plan has its own provisions and exclusions • Contact your employer and ask if your insurance has coverage for treatment of morbid obesity • What does “coverage” really mean?

  23. What Happens if My Insurance Company Denies My Request? • You have the right to appeal • Use supportive documentation from your PCP and surgeon (receipts, programs, gym memberships, ect.)

  24. How Long Does it Take to Pre-Authorize My Surgery? • Each insurance company has their own set of rules • They commonly request more information before approving or disapproving • The process takes from 1 hour to 2 weeks, and as long as months

  25. What Makes SacramentoBariatric Different? • Integrated program modeled after NIH and ASBS criteria. • Life-long commitment for patient access and follow-up • Multidisciplinary resources for post-surgical needs • Results will be pooled and compared to national data • Internet community and private bulletin boards for patients. • Emphasis on SAFETY and RESULTS!

  26. Final Words… * Surgery is only a tool * Patients must commit to lifelong changes in diet and behavior * Think seriously about options * We are here to help

More Related