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Body contouring in adolescents after bariatric surgery
Affiliation:1. Department of Surgery Stanford University School of Medicine;2. Division of Pediatric Surgery, Lucile Packard Children''s Hospital at Stanford University;3. Division of General Pediatrics, Lucile Packard Children''s Hospital at Stanford University
Abstract:BackgroundBariatric surgery leads to sustained weight loss and resolution of obesity-associated co-morbidities in severely obese adolescents. However, one consequence of massive weight loss is excess skin and soft tissue. Many details regarding the timing, outcomes, and barriers associated with body contouring surgery (BCS) in youth who have undergone bariatric surgery are unknown.ObjectivesDescribe the incidence and effect of BCS following bariatric surgery among adolescents.SettingUniversity Hospitals.MethodsTeen-Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery is a prospective multi-institutional study of 242 adolescents who underwent bariatric surgery from 2007 to 2012. Utilization of BCS was analyzed in this population with comparison of anthropometrics and excess skin–related symptoms between those who did and those who did not undergo BCS.ResultsAmong the 198 study participants with BCS data available, 25 (12.6%) underwent 41 body contouring procedures after bariatric surgery. The most common BCS was panniculectomy (n = 23). Presence of pannus-related symptoms at baseline and the magnitude of weight loss within the first year after bariatric surgery were independently associated with subsequent panniculectomy (P = .04 and P = .03, respectively). All adolescents who underwent panniculectomy experienced resolution of pannus-related symptoms. At 5 years after bariatric surgery, 74% of those who did not undergo panniculectomy reported an interest in the procedure, and 58% indicated that cost/insurance coverage was the barrier to obtaining BCS.ConclusionFew adolescents who underwent bariatric surgery later underwent BCS procedures. Panniculectomy effectively treated pannus-related symptoms. Disparities in access to surgical care for adolescents who desire BCS warrants further investigation.
Keywords:Body contouring surgery  Bariatric surgery  Panniculectomy  Adolescents  Excess skin
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