Need sources for a speech on WLS
I am giving a speech on WLS and want to cite sources on the long term success rates, complications, etc.
Any ideas on where to look? The source has to be credible!
FYI: this is a pursuasion speech for my college speech class and I am going in the direction against wls but honestly I could argue either way.
Any ideas on where to look? The source has to be credible!
FYI: this is a pursuasion speech for my college speech class and I am going in the direction against wls but honestly I could argue either way.
On March 28, 2011 at 7:18 PM Pacific Time, A_M_Y_C wrote:
I am giving a speech on WLS and want to cite sources on the long term success rates, complications, etc.Any ideas on where to look? The source has to be credible!
FYI: this is a pursuasion speech for my college speech class and I am going in the direction against wls but honestly I could argue either way.
www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ASMBS/14954
www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ASMBS/20919
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21359900
My surgeon's site has some good info:
http://www.northwestobesitysurgery.com/
LapSF is also a good source:
http://www.lapsf.com/
You can also just do some searches like "gastric bypass risks", "lapband complications", etc.
http://www.northwestobesitysurgery.com/
LapSF is also a good source:
http://www.lapsf.com/
You can also just do some searches like "gastric bypass risks", "lapband complications", etc.
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Copy of a post I have made several times. I have PMed you the source of the article in which they appeared (see copyright issue below). This is not the complete table, I just took a selection; I included the extremes (bad and good) and a fairly random selection fo the rest. The arguments for weight loss are less about teh los than about maintating the loss. I don't ahve the exadt figrue but of peopel who lose large amounts of weight, something like 5% of non-wls peolel are able to keep it off.
Please note (as my doc pointed out) that the first set all deal with bands implanted using the older perigastric technique which had a HIGHER complication rate than the pars flaccida which is now used. I do not know the country of origin of the studies, neither have I read them myself. I was given a warning that the journal in which they appear is strictly copyright and so I am not publishing that on the net! But if anyone wants to know, PM me. I am not clear on copyright law and don't want to fall foul of it!
Clearly the results are not consistent!
patients over time port/tubing probs slips/dilation erosion re-ops
Favrotti 1791 12 years 11.2% 3.9% 0.9% 5.9%
Vertuyen 543 7 2.9 4.6 0.9 6.8
Weiner 984 8 2.5 4.5 0.3 3.9
O'Brien 709 6 3.6 12.5 2.8 18.9
Chevalier 1000 7 5.7 10.4 0.3 11.0
Zehetner 190 6 2.6 2.6 2.1 8.5
Zinzindohoue 500 3 7.8 8.6 0 10.4
Tolonen 280 7 10.6 6.5 3.3 24.4
Miceletto 684 5 6.8 6.1 1.0 6.3
Dargent 1180 7 none stated 8.8 1.8 12.7
The following are shorter term studies all using the more modern pars flaccida technique.
Ponce 1014 4 1.2 2.3 0.2 8 removed
parikh 749 3 2.4 2.9 0.1 10.7
Holloway 500 3 9.2 5.0 1.0 not stated
Watkins 2411 3 2.3 5.1 0.1 8
Singhal 1140 3 0.35 0.26 0.09 2.1
Highest 290, Banded - 248 Lowest 139 (too thin!). Comfort zone 155-165.
Happily banded since May 2006. Regain of 28lbs 2013-14. ALL GONE!
But some has returned! Up to 175, argh! Off we go again,