“…Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) is one of the most performed procedures in clinical practice, and normally lead to weight loss between 20 and 35% of original weight (Peterli et al, 2018). Growing neuroimaging evidence indicates that LSG induces brain functional and structural alterations in regions and circuits implicated in reward (caudate, ventral tegmental area) (Faulconbridge et al, 2016;Zhang et al, 2016;Wang et al, 2020), emotion/memory [hippocampus (HIPP), amygdala (AMY)] (Zhang et al, 2019), self-referential processing [posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), precuneus] (Li et al, 2018;Liu et al, 2019), interoception (insula) (Wang et al, 2020) and inhibitory control [dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)] Hu et al, 2020), which those changes tend to be levels of normal weight subjects; and highlight their critical role playing in the longterm weight loss post-surgery (Behary and Miras, 2015;Lin and Qu, 2020). Meanwhile, for clinical treatment of gastrointestinal disease, there are other surgical procedures (i.e., stomach removal surgery for treating gastric cancer) which are similar to LSG by removing partial of the stomach (Kim et al, 2017;Omori et al, 2020).…”