BACKGROUND: NICE guidelines state that patients with psychological contra-indications should not be considered for bariatric surgery, including Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding (LAGB) surgery as treatment of morbid obesity, although no consistent correlation between psychiatric illness and long-term outcome in LAGB has been established. This is to our knowledge the first study to evaluate long-term outcomes in LAGB for a full range of DSM-IV defined psychiatric and eating disorders, and forms part of a research portfolio developed by the authors aimed at defining psychological predictors of bariatric surgery in the short-, medium- and long-term. METHODS: Case notes of 37 subjects operated on between April 1997 and June 2000, who had undergone structured clinical interview during pre-surgical assessment to yield diagnoses of mental and eating disorders according to DSM-IV criteria were analyzed according to a set of operationally defined criteria. Statistical analysis was carried out to compare those with a poor outcome and those considered to have a good outcome in terms of psychiatric profile. RESULTS: In this group of mainly female, Caucasian subjects, ranging in age from 27 to 60 years, one-third were diagnosed with a mental disorder according to DSM-IV criteria. The development of postoperative DSM-IV defined binge eating disorder (BED) or depression strongly predicted poor surgical outcome, but pre-surgical psychiatric factors alone did not. CONCLUSION: Although pre-surgical psychiatric assessment alone cannot predict outcome, an absence of preoperative psychiatric illness should not reassure surgeons who should be mindful of postoperative psychiatric sequelae, particularly BED. The importance of providing an integrated biopsychosocial model of care in bariatric teams is highlighted.
BACKGROUND: NICE guidelines state that patients with psychological contra-indications should not be considered for bariatric surgery, including Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding (LAGB) surgery as treatment of morbid obesity, although no consistent correlation between psychiatric illness and long-term outcome in LAGB has been established. This is to our knowledge the first study to evaluate long-term outcomes in LAGB for a full range of DSM-IV defined psychiatric and eating disorders, and forms part of a research portfolio developed by the authors aimed at defining psychological predictors of bariatric surgery in the short-, medium- and long-term. METHODS: Case notes of 37 subjects operated on between April 1997 and June 2000, who had undergone structured clinical interview during pre-surgical assessment to yield diagnoses of mental and eating disorders according to DSM-IV criteria were analyzed according to a set of operationally defined criteria. Statistical analysis was carried out to compare those with a poor outcome and those considered to have a good outcome in terms of psychiatric profile. RESULTS: In this group of mainly female, Caucasian subjects, ranging in age from 27 to 60 years, one-third were diagnosed with a mental disorder according to DSM-IV criteria. The development of postoperative DSM-IV defined binge eating disorder (BED) or depression strongly predicted poor surgical outcome, but pre-surgical psychiatric factors alone did not. CONCLUSION: Although pre-surgical psychiatric assessment alone cannot predict outcome, an absence of preoperative psychiatric illness should not reassure surgeons who should be mindful of postoperative psychiatric sequelae, particularly BED. The importance of providing an integrated biopsychosocial model of care in bariatric teams is highlighted.
Authors: Norman Poole; Ashraf Al Atar; Louise Bidlake; Alberic Fienness; Sara McCluskey; S Nussey; Gal Bano; John Morgan Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2004 Jun-Jul Impact factor: 4.129
Authors: Ramona Burgmer; Katrin Grigutsch; Stefan Zipfel; Anna Maria Wolf; Martina de Zwaan; Bernhard Husemann; Christina Albus; Wolfgang Senf; Stephan Herpertz Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2005-05 Impact factor: 4.129
Authors: Carrie S Sheets; Christine M Peat; Kelly C Berg; Emily K White; Lindsey Bocchieri-Ricciardi; Eunice Y Chen; James E Mitchell Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2015-02 Impact factor: 4.129
Authors: Jodi B Segal; Jeanne M Clark; Andrew D Shore; Francesca Dominici; Thomas Magnuson; Thomas M Richards; Jonathan P Weiner; Eric B Bass; Albert W Wu; Martin A Makary Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2009-12 Impact factor: 4.129
Authors: Ariana M Chao; Thomas A Wadden; Lucy F Faulconbridge; David B Sarwer; Victoria L Webb; Jena A Shaw; J Graham Thomas; Christina M Hopkins; Zayna M Bakizada; Naji Alamuddin; Noel N Williams Journal: Obesity (Silver Spring) Date: 2016-09-12 Impact factor: 5.002