Alverdy John C, Prachand Vivek, Flanagan Brody, Thistlethwaite William A, Siegler Mark, Garfinkel Marc, Angelos Peter, Agarwal Shailesh, Santry Heena
Department of Surgery and Medicine, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland MC 6090, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2009 Mar;13(3):465-77. doi: 10.1007/s11605-008-0742-1. Epub 2008 Nov 13.
The observation that obesity can be successfully treated by gastrointestinal surgery is a tribute to the innovative efforts by determined surgeons and the ever improving safety of general anesthesia. Yet as the body of knowledge and discovery on the root causes of human obesity accumulate, surgical approaches to treat morbid obesity are likely to change dramatically. While there is little doubt that dramatic weight loss can be achieved by surgically creating volume and absorption limitation to the reservoir and digestive functions of the gastrointestinal tract, human progress to more processed foods, less physical activity, and the pervasive public opinion that obesity is self-imposed are major obstacles to more widespread application of this approach.
Here we provide a mechanico-physiologic analysis of current operations, their rationale and limitations, as well as a glimpse of how future interventions might develop as a result of current knowledge in the field. The future of bariatric surgery is discussed in the context of these emerging technologies and in the context of the politics of obesity.
肥胖可通过胃肠手术成功治疗这一现象,是坚定的外科医生创新努力以及全身麻醉安全性不断提高的成果。然而,随着关于人类肥胖根本原因的知识和发现不断积累,治疗病态肥胖的手术方法可能会发生巨大变化。虽然通过手术对胃肠道的储存和消化功能造成容量和吸收限制无疑可以实现显著的体重减轻,但人类转向更多加工食品、更少体力活动以及普遍认为肥胖是自身造成的公众观念,是这种方法更广泛应用的主要障碍。
在此,我们对当前手术进行了机械生理学分析,阐述了其原理和局限性,并简要介绍了鉴于该领域当前的知识,未来干预措施可能如何发展。将在这些新兴技术以及肥胖症政治的背景下讨论减肥手术的未来。