1. Bariatric surgery in morbidly obese adolescents: a 4-year follow-up of ten patients.
- Author
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Widhalm K, Dietrich S, Prager G, Silberhummer G, Orth D, and Kispal ZF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Body Mass Index, Depression epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Obesity, Morbid psychology, Self Concept, Treatment Outcome, Bariatric Surgery methods, Bariatric Surgery psychology, Obesity, Morbid surgery, Patient Compliance, Weight Loss
- Abstract
Introduction: In cases that do not respond to non-surgical multidisciplinary treatment regimes, it seems the only possibility to offer bariatric surgical procedures., Methods: All ten patients (17.3+/-3 years old; body mass index (BMI): 49.1+/-6.8 kg/m(2)), who underwent bariatric surgery because of their morbid obesity at the Medical University of Vienna were included in the study and underwent medical care, psychological and nutritional treatment from a physician, a psychologist, and a nutrition expert before and after surgery (follow-up for a mean of 41+/-15.6 months) at regular intervals., Results: In total, all patients had a BMI loss of -10.33 kg/m(2), standard deviation, SD+/-6.6 (range from -3.3 to -25.07) at follow-up after 41 months, SD+/-15 months (range from 3 to 57), two patients dropped out because of lack of compliance. From a psychological perspective, the actual psychological condition was measured by five different psychological tests, e.g., 80% had a high score for depression, and 40% had negative self-acceptance., Discussion: The laparascopic gastric banding operation was not as effective in weight reduction as expected. We have to turn our attention to compliance, postoperative treatment and the psychological component.
- Published
- 2008
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