The Effect of Longitudinal Gastric Resection in Morbid Obesity Surgery on the Course of Insulin-Dependent Diabetes and Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease
Marat Borisovich Uzdenov
North Caucasus State Academy, Cherkessk, Republic of Karachay-Cherkessia, Russia.
Elvira Nazimovna Sherifova
Dagestan State Medical University, Makhachkala, Dagestan Republic, Russia.
Sergey Ismailovich Kubanov
North-Caucasus Federal University, Stavropol, Russia.
Aila Azretovna Uyanaeva
Kabardino-Balkarian State University named after H. M. Berbekov, Nalchik, Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, Russia.
Viktoriia Sergeevna Rudiakova
Rostov State Medical University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia.
Maryam Bashirovna Balaeva
Ingush State University, Magas, Republic of Ingushetia, Russia.
Kavsarat Kamaldinovna Atagishieva
Dagestan State Medical University, Makhachkala, Dagestan Republic, Russia.
Svetlana Nikolaevna Shikhina
Kuban State Agrarian University, Krasnodar, Russia.
Angelina Sergeevna Miroshnichenko
Stavropol State Medical University, Stavropol, Russia.
Alina Yurievna Maslova *
Stavropol State Medical University, Stavropol, Russia and Socmedica, Skolkovo, Russia.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Longitudinal resection of the stomach is a relatively new type of gastroplasty within the framework of bariatric surgery, which is gaining popularity worldwide today not only as a method of getting rid of excess subcutaneous fat, but also from a range of serious chronic diseases together. The potential of longitudinal gastric resection turned out to be promising, and if the first performed longitudinal gastric resection in 1988 was only a restrictive stage of biliopancreotic bypass surgery, then since the 2000s, laparoscopic longitudinal resection has been started as a deliberately first stage in patients with morbid obesity with high operational risk. To date, longitudinal gastric resection has become increasingly used in particularly difficult cases in the form of independent surgical intervention, for example, in the elderly, teenagers, people with cirrhosis of the liver and other severe pathologies. At the initial stages of the formation of this type of treatment, different surgeons did not have a common opinion on many issues related to the technique of this operation. And therefore, to date, the data on the longitudinal resection of the stomach of many years ago are contradictory. They do not create a holistic view of the effectiveness of surgical intervention, especially in the long term. According to IFSO (The International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders) data, in 2012, longitudinal gastric resection accounted for 27.8% of all bariatric operations, which even then overtook the gastric banding operation in terms of the number of operations. Over the past 20 years, a little more than 250 thousand such operations have been performed worldwide, and the frequency of performing longitudinal gastric resection increases every year.
The purpose of this article is to reveal the statistics of the effectiveness of longitudinal gastric resection.
Keywords: longitudinal gastric resection, obesity, gastroesophageal reflux disease, type II diabetes mellitus