1.The current status and future perspectives of bariatric and metabolic surgery in the management of obesity and its co-morbidities.
Gan Bin LI ; Zhen Jun WANG ; Jia Gang HAN
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2022;60(2):188-192
Bariatric-metabolic surgery (BMS) has the potential of decreasing body weight and improving obesity-related metabolic syndrome by restricting food intake and malabsorption. Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, adjustable gastric banding, biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch are four major BMS procedures. Sleeve plus surgery, one-anastomosis gastric bypass, intragastric balloon and endoscopic surgery are also arising and gaining popularity due to their specific efficacy. Currently, BMS is now experiencing an era with deeply integrated interdisciplinarity, optimizing and innovating of surgeries and well-illustrated clinical efficacy, as a result, more obese patients would benefit from BMS.
Bariatric Surgery
;
Gastrectomy
;
Gastric Balloon
;
Gastric Bypass
;
Humans
;
Laparoscopy
;
Morbidity
;
Obesity/surgery*
;
Obesity, Morbid/surgery*
2.Intragastric balloon for weight reduction: rationale, benefits, risks and indications.
Liangping WU ; Xiaojiang DAI ; Weiguo ZHAO ; Hongyan HUANG ; Li MO ; Xiaofeng WU
Journal of Southern Medical University 2020;40(10):1525-1529
Intragastric balloon (IGB) placement under endoscopy is a non-invasive method for weight loss.By placing a space-occupying balloon in the stomach, IGB treatment can achieve better effect of weight loss than medications.Herein we review the development of IGB, its effect on weight loss and the mechanism, and the eligible individuals for IGB treatment.We also examine the high-intensity postoperative management following IGB placement, which is important for maintaining long-term weight loss, and discuss the future development of IGB.The patients should understand that on the basis of ensuring a high safety, the weight-losing effect of IGB can be limited and relies heavily on postoperative management.Patients should make a decision on IGB placement after careful consideration of their own physical, economic, and psychological conditions, lifestyle and the line of work in addition to the indications of IGB.IGB placement combined with high-intensity postoperative management and active interventions of lifestyle and dietary habits help to achieve long-term effect of weight loss and improve obesity-related complications.
Endoscopy
;
Gastric Balloon
;
Humans
;
Life Style
;
Obesity
;
Obesity, Morbid/surgery*
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Weight Loss
3.Endoscopic treatment or balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration is safe for patients with esophageal/gastric varices in Child-Pugh class C end-stage liver cirrhosis
Keiji YOKOYAMA ; Ryo YAMAUCHI ; Kumiko SHIBATA ; Hiromi FUKUDA ; Hideo KUNIMOTO ; Kazuhide TAKATA ; Takashi TANAKA ; Shinjiro INOMATA ; Daisuke MORIHARA ; Yasuaki TAKEYAMA ; Satoshi SHAKADO ; Shotaro SAKISAKA
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2019;25(2):183-189
BACKGROUND/AIMS: There is a controversy about the availability of invasive treatment for esophageal/gastric varices in patients with Child-Pugh class C (CP-C) end-stage liver cirrhosis (LC). We have evaluated the validity of invasive treatment with CP-C end-stage LC patients. METHODS: The study enrolled 51 patients with CP-C end-stage LC who had undergone invasive treatment. The treatment modalities included endoscopic variceal ligation in 22 patients, endoscopic injection sclerotherapy in 17 patients, and balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration (BRTO) in 12 patients. We have investigated the overall survival (OS) rates and risk factors that contributed to death within one year after treatment. RESULTS: The OS rate in all patients at one, three, and five years was 72.6%, 30.2%, and 15.1%, respectively. The OS rate in patients who received endoscopic treatment and the BRTO group at one, three, and five years was 67.6%, 28.2% and 14.1% and 90.0%, 36.0% and 18.0%, respectively. The average of Child-Pugh scores (CPS) from before treatment to one month after variceal treatment significantly improved from 10.53 to 10.02 (P=0.003). Three significant factors that contributed to death within one year after treatment included the presence of bleeding varices, high CPS (≥11), and high serum total bilirubin levels (≥4.0 mg/dL). CONCLUSIONS: The study demonstrated that patients with a CPS of up to 10 and less than 4.0 mg/dL of serum total bilirubin levels may not have a negative impact on prognosis after invasive treatment for esophageal/gastric varices despite their CP-C end-stage LC.
Balloon Occlusion
;
Bilirubin
;
Endoscopy
;
Esophageal and Gastric Varices
;
Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Hypertension, Portal
;
Ligation
;
Liver Cirrhosis
;
Liver
;
Prognosis
;
Risk Factors
;
Sclerotherapy
;
Varicose Veins
4.Endoscopic Removal of Inflated Transected Sengstaken–Blakemore Tube Using Endoscopic Scissors
Jun Ho LEE ; Eu Kwon HWANG ; Chanmesa DOEUN ; Jeong Ju YOO ; Sang Gyune KIM ; Young Seok KIM
Clinical Endoscopy 2019;52(2):182-185
Balloon tamponade using Sengstaken–Blakemore (SB) tube is employed as a bridging therapy in cases in which endoscopic therapy fails to control esophageal variceal bleeding. Although SB tube insertion can lead to successful hemostasis, it is accompanied by numerous complications, with SB tube transection being one of the rarest complications. A 53-year-old man with liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma presented with massive esophageal variceal bleeding. Therapeutic endoscopic variceal ligation failed, and SB tube was inserted. The SB tube was unexpectedly disconnected because of the patient's irritability due to hepatic encephalopathy. The esophageal and gastric balloon of the SB tube remained inflated in the stomach. Whereas the use of other endoscopic instruments was ineffective, endoscopic removal was successfully accomplished using endoscopic scissors. In conclusion, we detected SB tube transection in a patient with hepatic encephalopathy and removed remnants of the inflated tube using endoscopic scissors.
Balloon Occlusion
;
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
;
Esophageal and Gastric Varices
;
Gastric Balloon
;
Hemostasis
;
Hepatic Encephalopathy
;
Humans
;
Ligation
;
Liver Cirrhosis
;
Middle Aged
;
Stomach
5.Gastric Ulceration and Bleeding with Hemodynamic Instability Caused by an Intragastric Balloon for Weight Loss.
Larrite REED ; Hawa EDRISS ; Kenneth NUGENT
Clinical Endoscopy 2018;51(6):584-586
Obesity in the United States is a medical crisis with many people attempting to lose weight with caloric restriction. Some patients choose minimally invasive weight loss solutions, such as intragastric balloon systems. These balloon systems were approved by the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) in 2015–2016 and have been considered safe, with minimal side effects. We report a patient with a two-day history of melena, abdominal pain, hypotension, and syncope which developed five months after placement of an intragastric balloon. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy with balloon removal revealed a small 8-mm gastric ulcer in the incisura. This gastric ulcer probably developed secondary to mechanical compression of the stomach mucosa by the gastric balloon which contained 900 mL of saline. The FDA is now investigating five deaths since 2016 associated with these second-generation balloons. Clinicians should be aware of these complications when evaluating patients with gastrointestinal complications, such as bleeding.
Abdominal Pain
;
Caloric Restriction
;
Endoscopy, Digestive System
;
Gastric Balloon
;
Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
;
Hemodynamics*
;
Hemorrhage*
;
Humans
;
Hypotension
;
Melena
;
Mucous Membrane
;
Obesity
;
Stomach
;
Stomach Ulcer*
;
Syncope
;
United States
;
Weight Loss*
6.Efficacy and future of endoscopic bariatric surgery in the treatment of obesity and metabolic diseases.
Shangjia HUANG ; Junchang ZHANG ; Zhiyong DONG ; Cunchuan WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2017;20(4):383-387
The emerging endoscopic technologies are proved to be effective treatments for obesity in selected patients and to offer the potential advantages of reduced invasiveness, reversibility and repeatability. From the view of operation principle, endoscopic technologies can be classified as restrictive procedure, malabsorption procedure and endoscopic revision of gastric bypass. Restrictive procedures include intragastric balloon, aspiration therapy, endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG) and transoral gastroplasty. Intragastric balloon employs space occupying, volume restriction and satiety mechanisms, which is superior to drugs and lifestyle change, but shorter than sleeve and bypass surgery. Aspiration therapy is similar to standard percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy, while there are no available data regarding the obesity and metabolic improvement. Compared with traditional bariatric surgery, ESG does not excise gastric tissue with less complications and without weight regain, but it can not be used as an independent operation still now. Transoral gastroplasty is rarely applied clinically whose efficacy and long-term complications need further studies. Malabsorption surgery includes endoscopic duodenojejunal bypass sleeve (EDJBS) and endoscopic gastroduodenojejunal bypass sleeve(EGDJBS). EDJBS may have the similar mechanism like bypass reducing the blood glucose. Even with obvious effect of weight loss, EDJBS has high morbidity of complications and requirements of the skilled operators. EGDJBS, which imitates bypass anatomy changes and belongs to the mixed operation, should be superior to the above procedures in reducing weight theoretically, but due to the lack of clinical data, its short-term and long-term efficacy still need further clinical observation. As compared to the complexity and risks associated with telescopic surgical revision, endoscopic suturing has been confirmed as less invasive and safer for stomal revisions, while its long-term efficacy of reducing weight and improvement of diabetes are not yet clear. Even if long-term efficacy of reducing weight and morbidity of complication in endoscopic bariatric surgery are still indefinite, and clinical trial researches of large sample and long-term follow-up are absent, with the development of endoscopic skill and the gradual clinical application, endoscopic bariatric surgery will provide a new option for the patients of obesity and metabolic diseases.
Bariatric Surgery
;
adverse effects
;
methods
;
statistics & numerical data
;
trends
;
Disease Management
;
Endoscopy
;
adverse effects
;
methods
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Gastric Balloon
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Gastric Bypass
;
adverse effects
;
methods
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Gastroplasty
;
adverse effects
;
methods
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Humans
;
Metabolic Diseases
;
surgery
;
Obesity
;
surgery
;
Reoperation
;
adverse effects
;
methods
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Surgical Stomas
;
pathology
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Weight Loss
7.Impact of a Newly Developed Short Double-Balloon Enteroscope on Stent Placement in Patients with Surgically Altered Anatomies.
Koichiro TSUTSUMI ; Hironari KATO ; Hiroyuki OKADA
Gut and Liver 2017;11(2):306-311
A newly developed short double-balloon enteroscope with a working channel enlarged to a diameter of 3.2 mm is a novel innovation in stent placement for patients with surgically altered anatomies. Herein, we report three patients in whom this new scope contributed to an efficient technique and ideal treatment. In the first case, the double guidewire technique was efficient and effective for multiple stent placements. In the second case, covered self-expandable metal stent (SEMS) placement, which is the standard treatment for malignant biliary obstruction, could be performed in a technologically sound and safe manner. In the third case, SEMS placement was performed as palliative treatment for malignant afferent-loop obstruction; this procedure could be performed soundly and safely using the through-the-scope technique. The wider working channel of this new scope also facilitates a smoother accessory insertion and high suction performance, which reduces procedure time and stress on endoscopists. Furthermore, this new scope, which has advanced force transmission, adaptive bending, and a smaller turning radius, is expected to be highly successful in both diagnosis and therapy for various digestive diseases in patients with surgically altered anatomies.
Cholangiopancreatography, Endoscopic Retrograde
;
Diagnosis
;
Double-Balloon Enteroscopy
;
Gastric Outlet Obstruction
;
Humans
;
Palliative Care
;
Radius
;
Stents*
;
Suction
8.Plug-Assisted Retrograde Transvenous Obliteration of Spontaneous Splenorenal Shunt for Refractory Hepatic Encephalopathy: Case Series.
Yena KANG ; Eun Jung KIM ; Sang Gyune KIM ; Young Seok KIM ; Jae Myeong LEE ; Boo Sung KIM
Soonchunhyang Medical Science 2016;22(1):23-26
Intervention treatment such as balloon retrograde or anterograde transvenous obliteration has been used for management of refractory hepatic encephalopathy as well as gastric variceal bleeding. Recently, plug-assisted retrograde transvenous obliteration without a help of balloon was newly developed to treat these patients. Here, we report three cases suffering refractory hepatic encephalopathy who were treated with this new technique.
Balloon Occlusion
;
Esophageal and Gastric Varices
;
Hepatic Encephalopathy*
;
Humans
;
Portasystemic Shunt, Surgical
;
Splenorenal Shunt, Surgical*
9.Novel Endoscopic Management of Obesity.
Clinical Endoscopy 2016;49(1):30-36
Endoscopic procedures have been well-documented in the obesity field, but have not yet reached a sufficient level of evidence as stand-alone methods for treating obesity. It is unclear if they should take over. Although expanding, the array of bariatric surgical techniques does not fully meet the current needs, and there are not enough resources for increasing surgery. Surgery is avoided by a majority of patients, so that less aggressive procedures are necessary. For the time being, relevant endoscopic methods include intra-gastric balloons, gastric partitioning (Endo-plication), and the metabolic field (Endo-barrier). Surgical novelties and basic research are also important contributors owing to their potential combination with endoscopy. Conditions have been listed for implementation of bariatric endoscopy, because innovation is risky, expensive, and faces ethical challenges. A scientific background is being built (e.g., hormonal studies). Some techniques require additional study, while others are not ready but should be priorities. Steps and goals include the search for conceptual similarities and the respect of an ethical frame. Minimally invasive bariatric techniques are not ready for prime time, but they are already being successful as re-do procedures. A time-frame for step-strategies can be defined, and more investments from the industry are mandatory.
Endoscopy
;
Gastric Balloon
;
Humans
;
Investments
;
Obesity*
10.Clinics in diagnostic imaging (165). Oesophageal rupture secondary to malposition of an SB tube gastric balloon.
Wan Ying CHAN ; Hsueh Wen CHEONG ; Tien Jin TAN
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(2):92-quiz 96
Oesophageal rupture is a life-threatening complication of balloon tamponade for bleeding oesophageal varices. We herein describe the clinical course and imaging findings in a 33-year-old Indian man who had a Sengstaken-Blakemore (SB) tube inserted for uncontrolled haematemesis, which was unfortunately complicated by malposition of the gastric balloon with resultant oesophageal rupture. The inflated SB tube gastric balloon was visualised within the right hemithorax on chest radiography after the SB tube insertion. Further evaluation of the thorax on computed tomography confirmed the diagnosis of oesophageal rupture associated with right-sided haemopneumothorax. It is crucial for both the referring clinician and reporting radiologist to recognise early the imaging features of an incorrectly positioned SB tube gastric balloon, so as to ensure prompt intervention and a reduction in patient morbidity and mortality.
Adult
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Esophagus
;
injuries
;
Gastric Balloon
;
adverse effects
;
Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
;
diagnosis
;
etiology
;
Humans
;
Intubation, Gastrointestinal
;
adverse effects
;
instrumentation
;
Male
;
Radiography, Thoracic
;
methods
;
Rupture
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
;
methods

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