Is Weight Loss Surgery an Easy Way Out?

In the spirit of Healthy Weight Week, the topic of this piece is weight loss surgery. An array of bariatric surgeries are available to those who have a significant amount of weight to lose, and some of these procedures will be discussed. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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Rita McMillan, age 41, reports to her place of employment, a large community hospital located in an upscale suburb of a large Midwestern city. She has been employed at the same hospital as an RN house supervisor in the pediatric intensive care unit for the past 12 years, but was recently promoted to a position as unit manager over the PICU and general pediatric floors. She's become accustomed to the plethora of complimentary comments from coworkers that started approximately six months ago: "You look so great!" "You must feel better." "What have you been doing to lose all that extra weight?"

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 69 percent of all Americans were overweight or obese during the year 2012. When broken down further, 35 percent of these overweight adults were also considered clinically obese, which essentially means they had body mass indexes (BMIs) of 30 or greater. An assortment of techniques to produce weight loss are available, including diets that involve reduced caloric consumption, exercise, commercial meal plans, Weight Watchers, and HCG injections, to name a few. However, without permanent lifestyle changes, any significant amount of weight loss is typically regained. In fact, about 80 percent of dieters regain all their lost weight, plus more.

Rita's body weight has cycled up and down wildly since her prepubescent years; this phenomenon is informally known as yo-yo dieting. Her highest adult weight of 267 pounds occurred in her mid-20s during a prolonged bout of depression, whereas her lowest weight of 130 pounds was achieved in her early thirties after exclusively breastfeeding her twin sons for 14 months while training for a half-marathon. 12 months ago, at 40 years of age, she became dispirited and disgusted at the number that flashed on her electronic scale: 220 pounds. That same afternoon she telephoned the clinic of a prominent bariatric surgeon to set up a consultative appointment. Rita had made up her mind: after losing and regaining the same 100+ pounds at least five times during her adult life, she was seriously exploring the option of weight loss surgery.

Bariatric surgery, also known as weight loss surgery, has exploded in popularity over the past three decades. The National Institutes of Health has deemed bariatric surgery the only effectual treatment for severe obesity and long-term weight loss. In addition, the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (2015) agrees that bariatric surgery leads to long-term weight loss success for most patients. Although a wide range of weight loss surgical procedures are available, the four most common ones are laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (a.k.a. Lap-Band), sleeve gastrectomy (a.k.a. gastric sleeve), gastric bypass, and the biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (a.k.a. duodenal switch).

Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding

Commonly called a Lap-Band, laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding is a restrictive procedure that entails placement of an inflatable silicone band around the upper portion of the stomach (ASMBS, n.d.). The newly created pouch is intended to induce a feeling of fullness when only a small quantity of food is consumed. The Lap-Band is reversible and typically yields 40 to 50 percent loss of excess body weight. Patients must routinely visit their surgeons' office or clinic to ensure the Lap-Band receives periodic 'fills' and 'unfills' of normal saline that produce enough restriction to maintain weight loss.

Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy

Informally known as the gastric sleeve, the laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy entails removal of the stomach's greater curvature. In this procedure, approximately 80 percent of the stomach is removed, and the remaining stomach pouch is stapled into a banana-shaped 'sleeve' that produces fullness after eating only a few ounces of food. The gastric sleeve is irreversible and normally generates 50 to 60 percent loss of excess body weight.

Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass

The Roux-en-Y gastric bypass starts with the creation of a golf ball-shaped stomach pouch and ends with the connection to the upper section of the newly divided small intestine to the small intestine further down so that stomach acids and digestive enzymes from the bypassed stomach and upper section of small intestine will eventually mix with the food (ASMBS, n.d.). This procedure typically leads to a loss of up to 80 percent of excess body weight, but also carries the risk of nutritional deficiencies.

Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch

Most commonly referred to as the duodenal switch, this procedure is usually reserved for the most severely obese patients because it leads to greater excess weight loss than all other types of bariatric surgeries. This procedure involves two integral steps: firstly, a small stomach pouch is surgically created, then a large section of the small intestine is bypassed to ensure food doesn't mix with biliary and pancreatic enzymes until far down into the small intestine, resulting in a remarkable decrease in absorption of calories, fats, and other nutrients (ASMBS, n.d.).

At 5'6" and 220 pounds, Rita's BMI of 35.5 placed her into the grade 2 obesity category. However, since she had less than 100 pounds to lose, the bariatric surgeon with whom she consulted was unwilling to perform a Roux-en-Y gastric bypass or duodenal switch. With a goal weight of 135 pounds and a goal BMI of 22, this meant she had about 85 pounds to lose. She opted for the sleeve gastrectomy, reached her goal weight in less than 8 months, and is successfully maintaining through a regimen that involves a high-protein diet combined with three days of strength training per week. Her type 2 diabetes and elevated cholesterol resolved within three months of the surgery.

Is weight loss surgery the easy way out? Some would say "yes," but many of those who have had bariatric surgery would say no. Finally, we must remember that weight loss surgery is merely a tool to a healthier life. It is up to the patient to execute the lifestyle changes that are required to maintain whatever weight has been lost, or else weight regain is a possibility. Celebrities such as Carnie Wilson are anecdotal evidence that a significant quantity of weight can be regained after bariatric surgery if adherence to lifelong changes does not occur.

RESOURCES

Long-term weight loss maintenance

FastStats - Overweight Prevalence

American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. (n.d.). Bariatric Surgery Procedures. Retrieved from Bariatric Surgery Procedures – ASMBS | American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery

American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. (n.d.). Benefits of Bariatric Surgery. Retrieved from Benefits of Bariatric Surgery | American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery

Kudos for including the Duodenal Switch in your article. Most topics ignore this most powerful surgery. As someone that has had a lap-band, never lost a significant amount of weight and had nothing but complications. Now I'm 3 weeks post a revision to Gastric Sleeve and I've experienced that only those that have never struggled with weight see surgery as the "easy way out."

As soon as I saw the topic, I knew I had to read. I'm 44, 5'10", and my heaviest has been abt 330lbs. A few years ago I started seriously thinking abt weight loss surgery. I started talking to my PCP abt it, got in touch with my insurance. And got in touch with the local Drs who do them. I had to first go to an info meeting abt all the surgeries. They require so many consecutive appts with my pcp (next week will be my last one), and my 1st appt with one of the bariatric Drs is 2/2. I also have needed to see a nutritionist (shes in the same group as my pcp) I also needed to see a therapist. They work with 2, specifically, so I DID see one of them, but I'm also glad I have been seeing one for several yrs. Hopefully, I'll get a surgery date on the 2nd. I don't really see it as an easy fix. Walking up and down my indoor steps is hard even with just 1 grocery bag (and that doesn't count the walk from my car). I have depression, anxiety, high bp and chol, diabetes runs in my family, as do several cancers. I know this is a lifestyle change. But honestly, if I don't make this change, I wont be around very long to make anymore changes.

Specializes in OR.

Exactly! We don't tell surgical cancer patients they should eat better and exercise and see if that makes the tumor go away.

This title and concept really angers me. Judgmental nurses/healthcare workers everywhere you turn. People who have a weight loss issue may use whatever means they choose, including NONE, and its NONE of anyone else's business. No one knows anything about another person and their internal processes, both mental and physical. If a person is able to lose weight by any choice they make then congratulate them on their improved health, not anything else.

chrystinp said:
This title and concept really angers me. Judgmental nurses/healthcare workers everywhere you turn. People who have a weight loss issue may use whatever means they choose, including NONE, and its NONE of anyone else's business. No one knows anything about another person and their internal processes, both mental and physical. If a person is able to lose weight by any choice they make then congratulate them on their improved health, not anything else.

Did you read *anything* beyond the title, for Pete's sake?! It was clear by the summary that bariatric surgeries are NOT necessarily a shortcut.

That like was an accident.

Specializes in TCU, Dementia care, nurse manager.

Thanks for such a clear and to the point description.

Yes, and none of what you're describing is, "An easy fix." Really, really angers me how this is addressed in this article. By a healthcare worker site, no less. Shame on them.

I absolutely read it. What makes you think I didn't? That the article somehow justifies the judgmental attitude, and therefore it's okay?

TheCommuter said:

Is weight loss surgery the easy way out? Some would say "yes," but many of those who have had bariatric surgery would say no. Finally, we must remember that weight loss surgery is merely a tool to a healthier life. It is up to the patient to execute the lifestyle changes that are required to maintain whatever weight has been lost, or else weight regain is a possibility. Celebrities such as Carnie Wilson are anecdotal evidence that a significant quantity of weight can be regained after bariatric surgery if adherence to lifelong changes does not adhere.

Now I'm not one to toot my own horn, but my reading comprehension scores have all scored consistently high, and I saw no condemnation, no judgement, and no ridicule. Furthermore, the article remained objective and informative without endorsing willy-nilly surgery OR restricting access to surgery. If you did, please indicate your sources. I included the above passage to exemplify the objective nature of this article.

There is a thing called projection. If you're bored, I suggest looking it up.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
chrystinp said:
This title and concept really angers me.

I'm the author checking back in...

The point of the title is to get people to click on the link to read the piece. People are more likely to skip out and not read if the title is boring or not catchy.

I think that perhaps you might have had a knee-jerk reaction since I never said that bariatric surgery was the easy way out.

I too am a nurse who has had bariatric surgery. 5 years ago (I just passed my surgiversary on the 17th) I had an RNY. I can truthfully say it saved my life. Presurgery I was 283lbs, had arthritis, sleep apnea, up several times a night to pee. Taking arthritis meds, 100mg of Januvia, 2500mg of metformin, 147u of Lantus a day and novorapid with meals. My blood sugar was never under 15. The blood pressure was creeping up, my joints ached and I was miserable. Within two days of surgery my blood sugar was under 10 with only a few units of novorapid. Never could get used to the metformin again, Had my A1C consistently drop, Stopped the Januvia within 3 months. Now I take vitamins, the odd med for arthritis. Blood pressure is normal, no more migraines, no more sleep apnea, no more getting up to pee 3 times a night.

Was it all easy? Hell no! I had complications from the flour de lis tummy tuck, Including a pooly healing wound and a seroma that required draining. I truly did look like death for a while. There was no controlling exactly how much weight I lost. I was gaunt, pale, tired. I had people always asking me if I was sick. I don't absorb iron still so I'm chronically anemic and have to have Venofer transfusions, I'm not as reliable with the total vitamin regimine. I just can't take that many pills a day. I dump if I eat too much sugar, and now get reactionary hypogylcemia if I eat too many white carbs. (ugh I love bread still)

I have sucessfully lost and kept off 150lbs. I lost a whole person! No way i could have done it without surgery. Was it without it's hurdles? Hell No. Hardest way I have ever lost weight and as anyone who goes this route knows we've tried every diet out there. I can live my life now. I am no longer diabetic. I had the condition removed off my drivers license 3 years ago. I have my health back, and I finally feel like my outside matches my inside. I will never shame anyone who climbs the mountain that is weight loss or shame them for their method. It's all hard work. Like another poster has said, this is just a tool. It's how I choose to use this tool that determines my continued success. Best wishes to all on this journey. Keep fighting the good fight however you choose to do it.

chrystinp said:
Yes, and none of what you're describing is, "An easy fix." Really, really angers me how this is addressed in this article. By a healthcare worker site, no less. Shame on them.

WOW!! Commuter never said that weight loss surgery was an easy fix. I think everyone here understood that but you. I actually learned a lot about the different types of surgery here and am glad for the info.