| Literature DB >> 34675393 |
Tushar Hari1, Samer Elsherbiny2.
Abstract
The incidence of bariatric surgery is increasing due to obesity being one of our top public health challenges. As such, bariatric-related ophthalmic changes are a potentially new clinical area of knowledge, with increasing published evidence on post-bariatric complications experienced by patients and identified by clinicians. We reviewed the available literature and summarised the different complications and potential recommendations. A search strategy was conducted with PubMed, Cochrane, Medline, Embase, Allied and Complementary Medicine and DH-DATA databases to look for papers answering our research question: "What are the ophthalmological complications for patients after bariatric surgery?". Our search gave a total of 59 relevant papers. Bariatric surgery, particularly subtypes that cause direct bypass of nutrients from the stomach, lead to nutritional deficiencies. Vitamin A, crucial for proper functioning of body systems and specialised cells, manifests ophthalmologically as corneal ulceration, nyctalopia, conjunctival xerosis and more. Thiamine levels are also depleted, leading to Wernicke's Encephalopathy. Pre-existing diabetic retinopathy is also noted to worsen sub acutely, although evidence is conflicting. Patients undergoing surgery to treat idiopathic intracranial hypertension would have reduced IOP and resolving papilloedema. Other comorbidities of obesity like HBA1C levels, obstructive sleep apnoea, and metabolic syndrome also resolve post-surgery. History taking remains the cornerstone of medical practice. From the evidence, we suggest consideration of pre-surgery screening for ophthalmic pathology and post-operative monitoring of disease progression. Real-world data needs to continuously be analysed to create definitive management pathways that can help clinicians recognise ophthalmic complications early, improving patient outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34675393 PMCID: PMC8529860 DOI: 10.1038/s41433-021-01811-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye (Lond) ISSN: 0950-222X Impact factor: 4.456
Summary of literature findings.
| Post bariatric surgery factor | Ophthalmic symptoms and signs | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin A deficiency | Dry skin, nyctalopia, conjunctival xerosis with Bitot spots, corneal xerosis, corneal ulceration, keratomalacia, tiredness and poor wound healing. | VAD is rarely seen in developed countries, so complications like Bitot spots may be hard to appreciate. |
| Thiamine | Vomiting and nausea, ataxia, altered mental status, eye movement disorders (nystagmus, ophthalmoplegia). | Most common presenting symptom and reason for hospital readmission is nausea and vomiting. A different sequence of presentation may need to be recognised if the ophthalmic signs occur first. |
| Diabetic retinopathy | Progressive/sudden vision loss, blurriness of vision. Signs elicited on fundoscopy: ocular oedema, cotton wool spots, microaneurysms, haemorrhages and hard exudates. | Important to establish retinopathy status preoperatively as well as postoperatively. This may require reflection on patient pathways linking bariatric surgery clinics and medical retina clinics. |
| Retina and choroid | Increased/decreased choroidal thickness, increased retinal thickening, no associated visual acuity reduction. | This may have some bearing on obese patients already under the care of medical retina clinics with more understanding of this finding. |
| IOP | Reduced IOP post bariatric surgery. | The relevance of this needs longer term prospective studies. |
| IIH | Improved symptoms and signs post bariatric surgery. | Some evidence to support bariatric surgery as a treatment option for recalcitrant IIH control. The role of this option in terms of priority in relation to established IIH treatment is unclear from the current evidence. |