Gastric bypass statistics

Gastric bypass surgery is one that comes with a certain degree of risk, but numerous benefits. For that reason, we've created this article in order to help you to better understand exactly what one is signing up for when they undergo the surgery.

- Gastric bypass surgery is a surgical option for those who are obese. It is generally recommended only for those who have no other method of losing the weight. It is a procedure that is considered by many across the United States, as a 1991 study showed that as much as 12 percent of the American population is obese. Obesity can cause a host of other problems, such as diabetes, depression, heart disease, and many others. Obesity is expected to become the number one cause of preventable death in the United States, eclipsing the usage of tobacco for the title.

- The number of people that are undergoing gastric bypass surgery is definitely on the rise. In the year of 1997, an estimated 22,000 gastric bypass surgeries were performed. As a contrast, in the year 2000, there were 47,000 performed. The number continued to grow in 2002, with 65,000 people undergoing the procedure. The American Society for Bariatric Surgery has projected that the number of gastric bypass procedures performed will increase exponentially.

- Gastric bypass surgery is definitely one of the most efficient methods of losing weight and keeping it off. While a proper diet and exercise may help weight loss, an estimated ninety percent of all dieters eventually regain the weight that they lost. By contrast, those who get gastric bypass surgery can expect to lose approximately seventy five to eighty percent of their excess weight within a single year after the operation is performed, and this weight is usually kept off for years.

- While gastric bypass surgery is an effective methodology for solving a weight loss problem, it is by no means an easy procedure for your body to handle. Approximately 3 out of 200 people who have the surgery die due to complications. There are many smaller side-effects that can occur as well, such as a five to fifteen percent chance of getting an ulcer condition due to the operation.

- It may seem that the obese may be able to overcome their weight problems without the assistance of surgery. However, statistics show that a full ninety five percent of all obese patients are unable to lose a sufficient amount of weight without surgery. Obesity is a big health problem, as those who are obese  may experience a life span that is between 13 and 20 years shorter than those of an average weight. Gastric bypass can limit the size of the stomach to one ounce, allowing the patient to only eat a diet that is of 1,000 calories or less per day. This method of weight loss is definitely proven to be one of the most efficient. It has been formally recognized as the only long-term solution for an obesity problem.

Gastric banding news on the Web

Gastric banding: Is it right for you? (Louisville Courier-Journal)
Baptist Hospital East offers adjustable gastric banding weight-loss (bariatric) surgery. To find out if you are a candidate for weight-loss surgery, the hospital is offering a free, physician-led information seminar at 6:30 p.m. next Thursday.

Bon Secours St. Mary's Is First Hospital in U.S. to Perform New Gastric Banding Procedure (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
A team of bariatric surgeons at Bon Secours St. Mary's Hospital today performed the first adjustable gastric band procedure in the United States using the REALIZE Adjustable Gastric Band-C, the newest REALIZE Personalized Banding Solution.

Surgery may put Type 2 diabetes in remission (Hamilton Spectator)
A Hamilton doctor using weight-loss surgery to treat diabetes has been flooded with appeals from dozens of patients eager to be part of his groundbreaking study.

Blake Fielder-Civil blames himself for Amy Winehouse's free-fall; Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt tie the knot: The ... (The Cleveland Plain Dealer)
Blake Fielder-Civil confesses he started Amy Winehouse down her road to ruin. Looks like Blake Fielder-Civil is working on on Steps Four and Five in the Twelve Steps. Those are the ones where an addict takes a moral inventory...

Weight Loss Surgery (The 33 News Dallas Fort Worth)
Kristie Jones in is for a routine checkup after having adjustable gastric banding surgery in September.She says surgery was her final option after a series of failed weight loss programs. "One too many french fries, not eating healthy, having high cholesterol in my family, and I just got back some results that i have high cholesterol as well." Since the surgery, Kristie has been on a ...

Weight loss by surgery (The Manila Times)
EATING disorders and obesity have become so prevalent that they have given rise to new medical specialties and procedures.

Surgery option targets obesity (St. Joseph News-Press)
Heartland Regional Medical Center has begun offering gastric banding surgery as an option for the growing number of obese individuals in St. Joseph and the surrounding area.

Lifewatch: Gastroplasty (WECT 6 Wilmington)
Until recently, shrinking the stomach for weight loss was done through a rather lengthy and risky surgery.  Now, a new procedure can do it under an hour with no cutting.

Pregnancy and fertility following bariatric surgery (News-Medical-Net)
Women who undergo weight-loss surgery, known as bariatric surgery, and later become pregnant after losing weight may be at lower risk for pregnancy-related diabetes and high blood pressure-- complications that can seriously affect the mother or her baby--than pregnant women who are obese, according to new findings from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality that are published in the ...

St. Louis Bariatric Surgeon Amps Up the Fight against Morbid Obesity with New Website (PRWeb)
Dr. Van L. Wagner with Heart of America Bariatrics, LLC is continuing the fight against morbid obesity by expanding his reach to the community and around the world with an educational, state-of-the-art new website. www.hoab.org incorporates many of the newest and most innovative web tools. (PRWeb Nov 25, 2008) Read the full story at ...