
What is Bariatric Revision Surgery?
A
bariatric “revisional” surgery is a procedure correcting a complication
of a prior bariatric weight-loss surgery and/or modifying a previous
bariatric surgery to re-establish its effectiveness as a metabolic and
weight-loss tool.
What kind of complications would require this surgery?
In
general, a revision is considered for a patient when there has been
either a clinical failure and/or a technical failure of the original
surgery. The complications are specific to each surgery, and the list is
too long to be complete. An example of a technical failure would be
repair of a staple line failure after gastric bypass, revision of a
dilated sleeve gastrectomy, or removal and replacement of a
malfunctioning component of a lap-band. An example of a complication
generic to all surgeries would be problems resulting from scar tissue
and adhesions from the primary surgery.
Could you explain what a clinical failure of weightloss surgery is and why a patient might have one?
Clinical
failure of a weight-loss surgery is an inadequate resolution of
weight-related health problems, which are almost always associated with
an inadequate weight loss. Simply put, the particular surgery wasn’t a
powerful enough intervention to overcome the severity of the
individual’s disease or the patient was not able to adopt and maintain
the profound behavioral changes necessary to achieve and sustain
success. The latter issue is usually the result of inadequate teaching
and training of the patient, which is a problem with the post-surgical
support program, not the patient. What this means is most revisions for
clinical failure are done to increase the power of the original surgical
procedure.
What is the most common bariatric revision surgery you do?
The
most common revision we see today is lap-band to sleeve gastrectomy
revision. This involves the removal of an unsuccessful or complicated
lapband and creation of a vertical sleeve gastrectomy. The need for this
type of revision surgery may be due to either a clinical failure, which
would demonstrate itself as inadequate weight loss or inadequate
resolution of severe weight-related health issues, called comorbidities,
or a technical failure wherein the patient has been clinically
successful but has had a complication with the lapband that requires
removal. This patient will still need a successful weight-loss surgery
to continue an uninterrupted successful outcome, thus making the
revision necessary.
What are some other examples of revision surgery?
I
want to preface this by saying that the answer is technically too
detailed and for the reader not to worry about fully understanding these
details at this point. Another good example of revision for a clinical
failure is what we call “Band over Bypass.” This revision is the
placement of a lap-band around the small stomach previously created by a
gastric bypass that has clinically failed. The added power of the
lap-band helps this individual re-achieve his/her prior success. Another
example of a technical revision is what we call a “Re-Sleeve.” This
patient has had a failure due to the dilation of their remnant stomach,
which results in significant complications including weight regain. By
re-creating the small size of the remnant stomach, we re-establish the
successful power of the original sleeve gastrectomy.
How common is the need for revision of prior weight-loss surgery?
Thankfully,
the incidence of technical failures requiring revision surgery is very
low. This is a testament to how good a job we have done in bariatric
surgery to standardize these procedures. The frequency of revisions for
clinical failure is actually growing but not for the reasons one might
think. As we understand more and more about the disease of morbid
obesity, we appreciate how it is truly a chronic illness and therefore
incurable at this juncture. Some individuals’ diseases progress as they
age or other external stressful life events amplify toolkit to
surgically enhance a previously successful their problem. We now have
more tools in our weight-loss surgery that has been diminished by these
external events, and that’s a good thing.
What advice would give you patients who think they might need a revision to their weight-loss surgery?
The
first thing is they definitely need their situation evaluated. The
second thing is that the evaluation needs to be performed by not only a
very experienced, ASMBS-certified bariatric surgeon but also one who has
significant experience in evaluating and performing revision surgeries.
Even though the risks of complications are low in the hands of a
surgeon experienced in revision surgery, these risks are higher than
with the primary or original surgery. For more information on revisions
of weight-loss surgery, please visit FreedomFromObesity.com or call
318.222.4282. For information on ASMBS, visit ASMBS.org.