News

Long-term data show laparoscopic Roux-en-Y still safer, cheaper than open


 

AT THE ACS CLINICAL CONGRESS

Longer length of stay was also a significant predictor of mortality, with patients staying a week or longer five times more likely to have died by the end of follow-up than the reference group of those staying 4-6 days. "Interestingly, we also found that patients who stayed 3 days or less were 73% more likely to have died." This probably represented patients who had serious perioperative complications, she suggested.

Having either surgery at a Center of Excellence reduced the risk of mortality by 25%, she added.

Dr. Weiss had no financial disclosures.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Unique daptomycin dosing studied in obese patients with VRE bacteremia
MDedge Family Medicine
AHA: Docs must tackle patient smoking, obesity, poor diet, and inactivity
MDedge Family Medicine
Drug combo tops sequential therapy in new-onset diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Bariatric surgery cuts long-term diabetes complications
MDedge Family Medicine
Study hints at obesity paradox in older women with coronary artery disease
MDedge Family Medicine
ESC 2013 Commentary: The Obesity Paradox
MDedge Family Medicine
Inherently low triglycerides may lower mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
Banish ‘obesity’ from your vocabulary when counseling about weight loss
MDedge Family Medicine
Gastric bypass induces diabetes remission in obese patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Why obesity spells higher cesarean section rates
MDedge Family Medicine