Morbid obesity. Reflections on a surgical protocol (II). The experience accumulated over 5 years

1995 
: Bariatric surgery is done on a selected, ill patient (morbid obesity), with a surgical risk which is intrinsic to his condition and morbidity. The results on any program are more a function of the adequate selection, information and control, than of the surgical model itself. The first 125 patients of the present surgical series have been reviewed, with a minimum of 18 months of follow up, and the complications are detailed, with emphasis on the compulsory and necessary radiological evaluation in the immediate post-operative period, during the follow up, and in the face of any complication. The effectiveness criteria of the technique and the real value of the weight loss are reevaluated, as well as defining the criteria of failure of surgical treatment. Finally, we end with an up dating of the psychological results observed, as well justifying the need for a bariatric surgery protocol, with its ethical-legal implications. The final conclusion is that bariatric surgery shall only be clinically and ethically accepted if it complies with the principles for which it was designed.
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