Back to Search Start Over

Religious Fasting of Muslim Patients After Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery: a Modified Delphi Consensus

Authors :
Khaled Gawdat
Ahmet Ziya Balta
Karim Sabry
Ali Aminian
Mousa Khoursheed
Maazulhassan
Faki Akin
Taryel Omarov
Mustafa Taskin
Khaleel Mohammad
Bijan Ghavami
Osama Taha
Waleed Bukhari
Yasser Kayyal
Radwan Kassir
Mehdi Skalli
Ahmad Bashir
Amir Hossein Davarpanah Jazi
Mumtaz Maher
Tahir Yunus
Ashraf Haddad
Mohammad Kermansaravi
Ramen Goel
Selim Jalil Illan
K S Kular
Ebrahim Aghajani
Aayed R. Alqahtani
Mohammad Talebpour
Tarek Mahdy
Tikfu Gee
Tarek A.O Abouzeid
Mohamed G Qassem
Haris Khwaja
Atif Inam
Bader AlHadhrami
Muhammad S Niam
Kamal Mahawar
Mujjahid Abbas
Halit Eren Taskin
Syed Tanseer Asghar
Masoud Rezvani
Abdolreza Pazouki
Mohanad AlAnsari
Abdelrahman Nimeri
Shahab Shahabi
Waleed Gado
Alaa Abbass
Amir Ulhagh Khan
Ebrahim Mansoor
Asim Shabbir
Safauldeen Salim
Mohammad AlHaifi
Laurent Abram Layani
Ibrahim Hassan
Ali AlHamdani
Syed Imran Abbas
Mohammed AlHadad
Salman Mirza
Aiman Ismaeil
Islam Omar
Mohamad Hayssam ElFawal
Source :
Obesity Surgery. 31:5303-5311
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Background Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of the Muslim faith. Despite the positive effects of fasting on health, there are no guidelines or clear recommendations regarding fasting after metabolic/bariatric surgery (MBS). The current study reports the result of a modified Delphi consensus among expert metabolic/bariatric surgeons with experience in managing patients who fast after MBS. Methods A committee of 61 well-known metabolic and bariatric surgeons from 24 countries was created to participate in the Delphi consensus. The committee voted on 45 statements regarding recommendations and controversies around fasting after MBS. An agreement/disagreement ≥ of 70.0% was regarded as consensus. Results The experts reached a consensus on 40 out of 45 statements after two rounds of voting. One hundred percent of the experts believed that fasting needs special nutritional support in patients who underwent MBS. The decision regarding fasting must be coordinated among the surgeon, the nutritionist and the patient. At any time after MBS, 96.7% advised stopping fasting in the presence of persistent symptoms of intolerance. Seventy percent of the experts recommended delaying fasting after MBS for 6 to 12 months after combined and malabsorptive procedures according to the patient's situation and surgeon's experience, and 90.1% felt that proton pump inhibitors should be continued in patients who start fasting less than 6 months after MBS. There was consensus that fasting may help in weight loss, improvement/remission of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, dyslipidemia, hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus among 88.5%, 90.2%, 88.5%, 85.2% and 85.2% of experts, respectively. Conclusion Experts voted and reached a consensus on 40 statements covering various aspects of fasting after MBS.

Details

ISSN :
17080428 and 09608923
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef13a227c7965077da31be4876f76855