From the DUH Files: Study -Gastric bypass weight-loss surgery increases risk of alcoholism

M M
on 5/10/11 2:48 am
 

From the DUH Files: Study -Gastric bypass weight-loss surgery increases risk of alcoholism

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Timely.

Post weight loss surgery, many people are fighting with already addictive behaviors.  Be. careful.

LA Times - 

Gastric bypass surgery for weight loss doubles the risk of developing alcoholism compared with Lap-Band surgery, Swedish researchers reported Monday. Researchers already knew that bypass surgery allows the body to absorb alcohol quicker, but the new findings, reported at the Digestive Diseases Week meeting in Chicago, are the first to suggest an increased risk of problems associated with the effect.

Dr. Magdalena Plecka Ostlund of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and her colleagues examined medical records for 12,277 patients who underwent bariatric surgery in Sweden between 1980 and 2006. The patients had a mean age of just under 40 and three-quarters of them were female. The team compared them with 122,770 carefully matched healthy controls in the general population. Prior to their surgery, the obese patients were significantly more likely than those in the general population to be treated for psychosis, depression, attempted suicide and alcoholism. After the surgery, the risks of the various disorders remained higher than normal, with the exception of psychosis, Ostlund said.

After the surgery, however, the risk of developing alcoholism among the patients who underwent Roux-en-Y surgery, commonly known as gastric bypass, was 2.3 times higher than in the group who underwent Lap-Band surgery. The Roux-en-Y procedure creates a smaller stomach pouch and bypasses part of the intestines. The Lap-Band procedure, in contrast, involves placing an inflatable silicon band around the stomach to restrict food intake, but food continues to pass through the entire stomach.

Dr. John Morton, a bariatric surgeon at the Stanford School of Medicine, noted that alcohol is normally at least partially metabolized in the stomach by enzymes there. When a patient has a gastric bypass, this digestion does not occur and the alcohol reaches the intestines largely intact. The finger-like structures called villi on the interior surface of the intestines absorb alcohol extremely well, so that the drug reaches high concentrations in the blood more quickly. "A single glass of red wine can make a bypass patient legally intoxicated regardless of weight loss," Morton said.

Researchers are not sure, however, how that increased absorption may increase the risk of alcoholism. Nonetheless, patients undergoing the surgery should be counseled to limit their consumption of alcohol. "They shouldn't drink as much and they shouldn't drink and drive afterwards," Morton said.

 
 
samsander
on 5/10/11 4:37 am - CA
This is a timely posting for me.

A friend brought over an AMAZING Napa Valley Merlot on Mothers Day and we opened it together, but drank only half.

Well, I guarentee you, I was NOT going to let a $85 bottle of wine rot on my counter or be used in soup..., so (naturally), I finished it last night!

It was not only super delicious, it was also super fun.... so I can certainly see why a GB person would not want to make a habit of this.

Mary SW 273  CW 158  GW 160


       

Cinn
on 5/10/11 5:14 am - MI
Mama:

Sorry, but I had to choose a transfer addiction. Alcohol won.
M M
on 5/10/11 5:17 am
 Had to?  I'm confused.
M M
on 5/10/11 5:17 am
 (Doesn't take much.)
Cinn
on 5/11/11 9:38 pm, edited 5/11/11 9:42 pm - MI
Sorry ladies, it was supposed to be a joke.  I see now this is no joking matter. Sorry.
MarilynT
on 5/10/11 7:00 am
???
(I'm confused, too)

Marilyn (now in NM)
RNY 10/2/01
262(HW)/150-155(GW)/159(CW)
(updated March 2012)

shellbell75
on 5/10/11 6:50 am
I know 4 people IRL who had WLS and 2 are alcoholics.
I have a family history of it so I avoid it and will continue to avoid it after surgery.
**SHELLY**   HW: 316   SW: 256   GW: 125  CW: 118       
 

 
Robert R.
on 5/10/11 6:59 am
Was never a drinker (maybe 2-4 mixed drinks per year) and haven't become one 6 months post-op. I don't see how anyone can drink after this, carbonation (beer) would be too uncomfortable plus I never really liked beer anyway. I have had 1 White Russian a couple months ago, but it made me so lightheaded, it took an hour to drink it. Just wasn't worth it.

Now Starbucks cold mocha is a different issue altogether.
     



    


  
M M
on 5/10/11 7:03 am
 People find ways.

Seriously.  It's a huge problem.
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