Rny Gastric Bypass has ** greater weight loss **, ** increased resolution of diabetes **, and ** improved quality of life** than Gastric Band,
RnY Gastric Bypass, has a better risk-benefit profile than the Band.
RnY Gastric Bypass has a similar rate of overall complications and lower rate of reoperations than LB.
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Vol. 146 No. 2, February 2011
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Better Weight Loss, Resolution of Diabetes, and Quality of Life for Laparoscopic Gastric Bypass vs BandingResults of a 2-Cohort Pair-Matched Study
Guilherme M. Campos, MD ;Charlotte Rabl, MD ;Garrett R. Roll, MD ;Sofia Peeva, BA ;Kris Prado, BA ;Jessica Smith, MD ;Eric Vittinghoff, PhD
Arch Surg. 2011;146(2):149-155. doi:10.1001/archsurg.2010.316
Background Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) and laparoscopic gastric banding (LB) are the 2 most common operations used to treat morbid obesity, but few controlled comparative studies have reported perioperative and long-term outcomes.
Design Two-cohort pair-matched study.
Setting Academic tertiary referral center.
Patients One hundred consecutive morbidly obese patients treated with LB were pair-matched by sex, race, age, initial body mass index, and presence of type 2 diabetes mellitus with 100 patients who were treated with RYGB.
Main Outcome Measures Perioperative and postoperative complications, reoperations, and 1-year outcomes, including weight loss, type 2 diabetes resolution, and quality of life.
Results The RYGB and LB groups had similar characteristics. One-year outcomes were available for 93 patients in the LB group and 92 in the RYGB group. The overall rate of complications was similar in both groups (11 patients in the LB group [12%] vs 14 in the RYGB group [15%]; P = .83), with a higher rate of early complications (30 days) after RYGB (11 patients [11%] vs 2 [2%] for LB; P = .01) and a higher rate of reoperations after LB (12 patients [13%] vs 2 for RYGB [2%]; P = .009). No deaths occurred. Excess weight loss (36% vs 64%; P < .01), resolution of diabetes (17 patients [50%] vs 26 [76%]; P = .04), and quality-of-life measures were better in the RYGB group.
Conclusions When performed in high-volume centers by expert surgeons, RYGB has a similar rate of overall complications and lower rate of reoperations than LB. With the benefit of greater weight loss, increased resolution of diabetes, and improved quality of life, RYGB, in these circumstances, has a better risk-benefit profile than LB.



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regann
Wed 11 May 2011 6:32 AM
I'm sure sitting all the time isn't good for us, but all this romanticization of how much healthier life was when people worked on their feet all day is heinous. I'm the first desk worker in my family, so I've been around people all my life who have the standing jobs. My mom worked all day in a textile mill and a job like that puts tremendous stress on your body -- she had tendinitis, plantar fasciitis, hemorrhoids, back issues, not to mention a slew of other problems that I can't remember off the top of my head. Point is, the working on her feet for 15 years left my mom completely bedridden by the time she was 40, so I'm really not buying how much greater it is to stand all day.
And LOL at the 'we weren't fat when we worked in fields/factories a hundred years ago' trope. People also didn't have access to enough food and usually spent their whole lives malnourished and vitamin-deprived, but that's so much better than being overweight! (Edit comment)
zegota
promoted by regann
This. I think people (me included, definitely) should be encouraged to walk around a little every hour, as it seems clear from the science that's pretty healthy. I've yet to see a study that standing 8-10 hours a day is great for your health, though. (Edit comment)
Tethtibis Deseidhr
promoted by regann
I feel really bad for all of those in wheelchairs who CAN'T stand up. according to this, their life expectancy is 15 more years....
yeah, not buying it. (Edit comment)
Kamatari +
They also didn't have access to cost cutting-bad-for-you additives such as High fructose corn syrup. Anywho, the point is sitting down being bad for you is true non the less. I wouldn't suggest standing all day; a healthy balance of some movement throughout the day does do much better than hours of sitting. (Edit comment)
geeky_reader
promoted by regann
I'm not buying into the standing cult either. I agree that sitting isn't the ideal thing to do for prolonged periods of time, however, I'm not sure if it's less harmful than a physically demanding job.
My mother worked at retail stores for the majority of my childhood. I remember her almost constant pain from being on her feet all day, on top of getting to and from the bus stop as part of her commute. I deal with a lot of crap at my desk job, but at least I don't have physical reminders of how much working sucks. I am in fact not just grateful but relieved that I am comfortable while cranking out code. I embrace the wimpiness.
My father worked in the coal mines for several years. I'd say if it wasn't for the lung problems that come with working in the mine, that job would have been the best possible for him. I think he probably put in 6 miles a day which is probably better than a retail job since the majority of time spent on his feet was used for walking rather than standing. (Edit comment)
regann
I agree that moderation is key but this infographic is singing the praises of working in a field or factory all day which I think we can all agree sucks and is not the idyll it's presented as. (Edit comment)
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