News: Bariatric surgery keeps getting safer.
Scottsdale – Bariatric surgery keeps getting safer. In our final review of the year, we discuss the bottom line numbers with bariatric surgery. According to a Duke University Medical Center researcher who reviewed data from nearly 60,000 patients, modern weight-loss surgery resulted in low complication and low mortality rates. The analysis indicates complication rates are around 10 percent, with the most common problem being nausea and/or vomiting. Importantly, the total mortality rate was under one percent (0.135%) with 78 deaths reported among 57,918 patients.
“The complication and mortality rates are even lower than have been reported in the past,” says Eric J. DeMaria, MD, of the Department of Surgery at Duke, who presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery in Grapevine, TX. The data was accrued from participants in the Bariatric Surgery Centers of Excellence program. “We believe the Bariatric Surgery Centers of Excellence program is one reason why there is an even further reduction in mortality being observed,” says Dr. DeMaria.
The safety results are the first to be derived from the Bariatric Outcomes Longitudinal Database (BOLD), compiled by the Surgical Review Corporation, an independent, non-profit organization whose mission is to advance the safety, efficacy and efficiency of bariatric and metabolic surgical care, worldwide. . The organization has designated nearly 650 surgeons and more than 350 hospitals and freestanding outpatient facilities since launching the centers of excellence for bariatric surgery in 2003. “The data collection effort is significant because it will help us understand how to better care for bariatric surgery patients now and in the future,” says Dr. DeMaria. According to the ASMBS, more than 200,000 people undergo bariatric surgery each year in the U.S.
“This is just the beginning,” added Dr. DeMaria, “This enormous database will help us develop risk stratification guidelines for patients so we will know definitively what the risks are for a certain type of patient, and will then be able to focus on how to improve those risks. It also allows researchers to look at less common issues with more information than we’ve ever had before.”
Considering plastic surgery after major weight loss in the Scottsdale and Phoenix, Arizona area? Please call (480) 970-2580 or use our contact form today to schedule a complimentary consultation.
Source: Duke University School of Medicine.
This entry was posted by Dr. Aldo on December 31, 2009 at 5:47 am, and is filed under Bariatric Surgery. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0.You can leave a response or trackback from your own site.
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