Gastric Bypass
First and foremost, the treatment of obesity focuses on a conservative approach. Doctors, dieticians, psychologists, psychotherapists and physiotherapists are involved in this method. If this approach is not sufficient to achieve sufficient weight loss, a surgical procedure is considered if the body mass index (BMI) is over 40 or – if concomitant diseases are present – a BMI of over 35.
BMI – also body mass index, body mass number or Quetelet-Kaup index – is a measure for evaluating a person’s body weight in relation to their height.
The BMI is calculated by dividing the body weight in kilograms by the height in meters squared. As BMI, or obesity, increases, the risk of obesity-related diseases increases.
The surgical procedures used in obesity therapy are “restrictive” and “malabsorptive” procedures. Restrictive procedures, like tube stomach surgery, involve the sole reduction of the amount of food that can be fed by reducing the volume of the stomach. Malabsorption is the reduction of food intake from the food pulp by eliminating a segment of the small intestine of varying length. Gastric Bypass surgery is a predominantly restrictive procedure with concomitant malabsorptive effects. In contrast, the variant, omega-loop Roux-En-Y Gastric Bypass surgery, focuses on malabsorption. Both Gastric Bypass procedures are reversible. The original anatomy can be restored because no parts of the intestine and/or stomach are removed.
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