A minority of patients underwent body contouring. Patients assuming the costs of body contouring were twice as likely to have additional surgery. These results suggest that socioeconomic factors play an important role in the decision to have body contouring but may not predict who will have concomitant or additional procedures.
Complication profiles related to reconstruction may be compounded by timing of bariatric surgery and subsequent weight loss. Further multicenter prospective analysis should aid in assessing cancer risk after weight loss along with timing of reconstruction to optimize outcomes in this population.
Investigation of the bypassed stomach in patients with suspected peptic ulcer disease presents a major challenge to bariatric surgeons. Various methods have been suggested for visualization of the duodenum and bypassed stomach. These include endoscopy via percutaneous gastrostomy access, retrograde endoscopy and virtual gastroscopy using CT scan. We present a case of peptic ulcer bleeding diagnosed with the help of conventional CT scan. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second such case reported in the literature and the first in the bariatric population.
Hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance, and acanthosis nigricans (HAIR-AN) is a severe subphenotype of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). A 32-year-old woman with HAIR-AN and class 3 obesity presented to an endocrinology clinic after she failed sequential trials of treatment with metformin, estrogen–progestin OCP, spironolactone, leuprolide, and a levonorgestrel intrauterine device. She complained of hirsutism and acanthosis nigricans severely affecting her quality of life and had secondary amenorrhea. Laboratory evaluation showed extremely elevated testosterone and insulin levels and elevated glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c). She underwent laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. One year after the surgery, she lost 32% of her body weight and reported normalization of menses, dramatic improvement in hirsutism, and near-resolution of acanthosis nigricans. Her testosterone, insulin, and HbA1c normalized. This case demonstrates the central role of hyperinsulinemia in HAIR-AN and suggests that aggressive measures to normalize insulin resistance and reduce excess weight can effectively treat the reproductive abnormalities in this syndrome. We suggest that bariatric surgery can be an effective cure for HAIR-AN syndrome and that PCOS, including HAIR-AN, should be considered a comorbidity of obesity during evaluation of bariatric surgery candidates.
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