Gastric Bypass Urged for Very Obese Diabetics
posted 11/14/03
Researchers recommend that stomach bypass surgery should become
"standard treatment" for morbidly obese patients with type 2 diabetes, because
the majority achieve excellent glucose control following the procedure.
In the Annals of Surgery, Dr. Philip R. Schauer, at the University of
Pittsburgh, and others describe the outcomes of 191 such patients who underwent
"keyhole" surgery to bypass a large part of the stomach. The procedure
drastically reduces the absorption of food.
Within days after surgery, about one third of the patients no longer required
anti-diabetes medication.
Among the 119 subjects who had diabetes for 5 years or less, the disease
completely resolved in 95 percent, with no recurrences during an average 20
months of follow-up.
For the entire group, average weight decreased from 308 to 211 pounds. Prior to
surgery, 65 percent required oral anti-diabetes medication and 27 percent
required insulin. Afterward, those figures dropped to 13 percent and 6 percent.
Also, many patients reported that diabetes-related nerve damage or erectile
dysfunction had improved.
The surgery is not without risks. Some 13 percent of patients experienced
problems, consisting primarily of pneumonia, small bowel obstruction or blood
clots. There was one death within the first month after surgery.
Nonetheless, Schauer's group says, "Unequivocally, surgery is superior to
medical management of type 2 diabetes" in very obese patients.
They recommend that gastric bypass in this situation should be performed early
in the course of the disease before permanent damage has occurred.
Source: Diabetes In Control.com: Annals of Surgery, October 2003.