DISEASES AND CONDITIONS

Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy Overview

By Iliades, Chris, MD 
 | 
June 05, 2019

Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy Overview

If you are very overweight, obesity surgery may be a choice for you. Obesity surgery is also called bariatric surgery. Your healthcare provider may advise it if you have a body mass index (BMI) higher than 40. A BMI of greater than 40 typically means that you are about 100 pounds overweight. One of the newer choices for bariatric surgery is called laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG).

The LSG procedure

LSG surgery is done in a hospital under general anesthesia. Your surgeon will make about 5 small cuts in your belly. He or she will use a thin, long, scope with a tiny camera at the end to do the surgery. Instruments pushed through the incisions will be used to remove about 80% of your stomach. Your surgeon will do the procedure while viewing the images on a TV screen in the operating room.

This surgery takes out the part of your stomach that curves outward, called the fundus. After the fundus is taken out, your surgeon will close the rest of your stomach into a tube shape that looks like a banana or the sleeve of your shirt, hence the name "sleeve gastrectomy." Because you will have a much smaller stomach, you will fill up quickly at mealtimes and eat less.

The fundus secretes a hormone called ghrelin. This hormone may be partly responsible for making you feel hungry. So, removing it may also help you lose weight afterward by decreasing your hunger.

LSG surgery takes about 2 hours. Most people stay in the hospital for about 2 days after surgery.

Reasons to consider LSG surgery

Here are some reasons why LSG may be right for you:

  • If you have a BMI of more than 60, LSG may be used as a first surgery to help you lose enough weight so you can then safely have a second, more extensive type of weight-loss surgery at a later date. The risks with some forms of bariatric surgery are much higher for people with a BMI over 60.

  • If you are older or have other risk factors for surgery like heart, lung, or liver problems, LSG may be a safer choice for you than other longer and more complicated weight-loss surgeries.

  • If you have a BMI of about 40 to 50, your healthcare provider may recommend LSG. That's because it's less likely to cause side effects. These include stomach ulcers or poor food absorption than other forms of weight-loss surgery.

Weight-loss benefits of LSG

In the first 2 years after LSG, most people will lose between 40% and 50% of their body weight. If your BMI before surgery is 60 or more, you may lose about 125 pounds.

Studies also show that if you have obesity-related problems like diabetes, high blood pressure, sleep apnea, or high cholesterol, you have about a 75% chance that these conditions will also improve.

Risks of LSG surgery

Any surgery done under general anesthesia carries some risk for heart and brain damage, but these risks are low. LSG is a shorter procedure than other types of gastric bypass surgery. With LSG surgery you have a 5% to 10% risk for a complication such as:

  • Leaking of stomach juices from where the stomach has been removed

  • Bleeding

  • Blood clot that forms in your leg and travels to your lungs and heart

  • Narrowing of the inside diameter of the new stomach

  • Infection

  • Nutrients poorly absorbed

  • Hernia

  • Bowel blockage

To help protect against gastrointestinal problems and weight regain, continue to have careful follow-up past the third year after surgery.

Weight loss after LSG slows down after a few years, and your stomach may stretch and grow. For any bariatric surgery to succeed, you must make important lifestyle changes that include both better nutrition and regular exercise.

Be sure to discuss any type of weight-loss surgery carefully with your healthcare provider. Before surgery you will need to have a complete physical exam to make sure you are healthy enough to have the procedure. You should also get nutritional and mental health counseling to make sure you are prepared for what to expect after surgery. 

Updated:  

June 05, 2019

Sources:  

Complications of Bariatric Surgery. UpToDate

Reviewed By:  

Raymond Kent Turley BSN MSN RN ,Tennille Dozier RN BSN RDMS,Raymond Kent Turley BSN MSN RN