Recommendations for bariatric and metabolic surgical operations during the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey.
Varlık ErolAziz SümerOsman Anıl SavaşÇağhan PekşenHüseyin GülayRecep AktimurMehmet Mahir OzmenPublished in: Turkish journal of surgery (2020)
The world has been struggling with the COVID-19 virus since December 2019. Turkey has also been battling with the virus since March 2019. While struggling with this unknown virus, we have postponed our new bariatric surgeries like most elective surgery. However, curfew and quarantine period (increase in food intake and decreased physical activity) increases risks for morbidity and mortality because of obesity and diabetes. When the pandemic decreases and disappears, many obesity patients will seek treatment for obesity and the workload of surgeons will increase. Before bariatric and metabolic surgery operations, which is the most effective treatment of obesity and related comorbidities, necessary precautions must be determined and implemented to protect patients and healthcare workers before and during surgery. In this review, it was aimed to determine the pre-peri and postoperative periods of bariatric surgical requirements. This review has been written on behalf of the Turkish Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery as an initiative in order to answer some questions about bariatric and metabolic surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- bariatric surgery
- roux en y gastric bypass
- minimally invasive
- end stage renal disease
- coronary artery bypass
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- gastric bypass
- coronavirus disease
- weight gain
- physical activity
- ejection fraction
- sars cov
- high fat diet induced
- newly diagnosed
- obese patients
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- patients undergoing
- cardiovascular disease
- body mass index
- quality improvement
- patient reported outcomes
- coronary artery disease
- combination therapy
- acute coronary syndrome
- smoking cessation
- clinical practice