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Impact of bariatric surgeries on diabetes outcomes / Impacto da cirurgia bariátrica no resultado do diabetes
Muscelli, Elza; Alecrim, Hugo Muscelli.
  • Muscelli, Elza; Universidade Estadual de Campinas. School of Medicine. Campinas. BR
  • Alecrim, Hugo Muscelli; Universidade de Brasília. School of Medicine. Brasília. BR
Rev. Soc. Bras. Clín. Méd ; 12(2)abr.-jun. 2014. graf
Artículo en Portugués | LILACS | ID: lil-712268
ABSTRACT
Obesity and type 2-diabetes (T2D) are associated to dramatically high morbidity and mortality, and their incidence and prevalence are increasing rapidly. Bariatric surgeries, including a variety of gastrointestinal surgical procedures achieve substantial and sustained weight loss in morbidly obese patients, strongly improves diabetes and hypertension control or prevalence, quality of life, decreases incidence of stroke, myocardial infarction and obstructive sleep apnea among other favorable clinical outcomes. Most important, mortality rates decreases. The objectives of this narrative review were the effectiveness of bariatric procedures on diabetes remission or improvement and the implicated mechanisms. It was found that bariatric surgeries induce high rates of short and long-term diabetes remission (from 60 to 95% or improved control), according to the surgical intervention, with low frequency of perioperative and postoperative complications. Rates of diabetes recurrence are not well known, but the time free-of-disease should ameliorate diabetes complications and mortality. The mechanisms are still not completely understood; encompass improved insulin action, better b-cell function, higher adiponectin, lower inflammation and complex changes of hormones of the entero-insular axis, GLP-1 and glucose dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP). Insulin action improves proportionally to weight loss (WL), in most types of surgery, but normalizes after Bilio-pancreatic diversion even in still obese people. b-cell function improves more after bypass than after restrictive surgeries, but does not normalize and baseline function predicts diabetes remission. Efforts to understand mechanisms and predictive factors for diabetes remission may optimize surgical interventions for metabolic disorders even in less obese patients. Finally and more important, they might drive the development of new clinical approaches for T2D...
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Texto completo: Disponible Índice: LILACS (Américas) Asunto principal: Pérdida de Peso / Cirugía Bariátrica / Obesidad Tipo de estudio: Estudio pronóstico / Factores de riesgo Límite: Femenino / Humanos / Masculino Idioma: Portugués Revista: Rev. Soc. Bras. Clín. Méd Asunto de la revista: Terapeutica Año: 2014 Tipo del documento: Artículo País de afiliación: Brasil Institución/País de afiliación: Universidade Estadual de Campinas/BR / Universidade de Brasília/BR

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Texto completo: Disponible Índice: LILACS (Américas) Asunto principal: Pérdida de Peso / Cirugía Bariátrica / Obesidad Tipo de estudio: Estudio pronóstico / Factores de riesgo Límite: Femenino / Humanos / Masculino Idioma: Portugués Revista: Rev. Soc. Bras. Clín. Méd Asunto de la revista: Terapeutica Año: 2014 Tipo del documento: Artículo País de afiliación: Brasil Institución/País de afiliación: Universidade Estadual de Campinas/BR / Universidade de Brasília/BR