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Published in: Obesity Surgery 5/2018

01-05-2018 | REVIEW

Specialty Article: so You Think You Got a Bypass? A Case Series of Adventures in Bariatric Surgery

Authors: Eugene Y. Wang, Timothy R. Shope

Published in: Obesity Surgery | Issue 5/2018

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Abstract

To raise awareness for surgeons encountering bariatric patients with anatomy that deviates from the standard Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). This is a single-institution retrospective case series over 12 years (2003–2014) involving patients who believed they received RYGBs, but actually did not. Data was obtained reviewing physician encounters, imaging, and operative reports. There were six cases with confusing clinical pictures, found to have aberrant RYGB anatomy: (1) gastric bypass with jejuno-jejunostomy only without gastrojejunostomy, (2) distal partial vertical gastrectomy without expected prosthetic band, (3) inverse vertical banded gastroplasty, (4) non-divided gastric bypass with no gastrojejunostomy, (5) 20-cm Roux limb, with gastro-gastric fistula, and (6) 200-cm bilio-pancreatic limb similar to the traditional Scopinaro procedure. There are cases of “Roux-en-Y gastric bypasses” that have no resemblance to the named procedure at all. Adjunctive upper gastrointestinal studies and upper endoscopies help surgeons make diagnoses that are incongruent with the surgical history. It is important to keep in mind that there could be anatomic or surgical variations which were born out of necessity or based on other surgeons’ creativities.
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Metadata
Title
Specialty Article: so You Think You Got a Bypass? A Case Series of Adventures in Bariatric Surgery
Authors
Eugene Y. Wang
Timothy R. Shope
Publication date
01-05-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Obesity Surgery / Issue 5/2018
Print ISSN: 0960-8923
Electronic ISSN: 1708-0428
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-018-3149-4

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