“…Now it is considered a full primary bariatric procedure, safe and effective even as conversion procedure after failure or complications of other bariatric operations [8,9]. Several different mechanisms have been postulated to lead to weight loss after LSG, such as the reduced expansibility and capacity of the sleeved stomach [10], the higher pressure induced by solid food intake [11], improved mitochondrial respiration [12] and insulin sensitivity [13,14], and lower plasma levels of ghrelin [15], mainly produced in the fundic region by specialized gastric cells [16,17]. In common clinical practice, the radiological followup was usually indicated only for patients with symptoms or unsatisfactory weight loss curve, but the correlation between gastric fundus at follow-up upper gastrointestinal series (UGS) and weight loss remains unclear [18].…”