Department of Nutrition, European Georges Pompidou Hospital, APHP, Paris, France.
Department of Endocrinology-Nutrition, Ambroise Paré Hospital, AP-HP, EA4340 Research Unit, Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, University Paris-Saclay, 92100, Boulogne-Billancourt, France.
Obes Surg. 2023 May;33(5):1356-1365. doi: 10.1007/s11695-023-06538-x. Epub 2023 Mar 29.
The obesity pandemic is associated with an increasing number of bariatric surgeries which allow improvement in obesity-related comorbidities and life expectancy but potentially induce nutritional deficiencies. Vegetarianism becomes more and more popular and exposes as well to vitamin and micronutrient deficiencies. Only one study has explored the impact of vegetarianism on the preoperative nutritional status of eligible patients for bariatric surgery, but none in postoperative care.
We conducted a retrospective case-control study in our cohort of bariatric patients, matching 5 omnivores for each vegetarian. We compared their biological profile regarding vitamin and micronutrient blood levels before and 3, 6, 12, and 30 months after surgery.
We included 7 vegetarians including 4 lacto-ovo-vegetarians (57%), 2 lacto-vegetarians (29%), and one lacto-ovo-pesco-vegetarian (14%). Three years after surgery with equivalent daily standard vitamin supplementation, the two groups showed a similar biological profile including blood levels of ferritin (p = 0.6), vitamin B1 (p = 0.1), and B12 (p = 0.7), while the total median weight loss at 3 years was comparable (39.1% [27.0-46.6] in vegetarians vs 35.7% [10.5-46.5] in omnivores, p = 0.8). We observed no significant difference between vegetarians and omnivores before surgery regarding comorbidities and nutritional status.
It seems that, after bariatric surgery, vegetarian patients taking a standard vitamin supplementation do not show an increased risk of nutritional deficiencies compared to omnivores. However, a larger study with a longer follow-up is needed to confirm these data, including an evaluation of different types of vegetarianism such as veganism.
探讨素食主义对肥胖患者接受减重手术前后营养状况的影响。
我们对我院肥胖患者进行了回顾性病例对照研究,按 1:5 的比例匹配了 5 名杂食者作为对照。比较两组患者术前和术后 3、6、12 和 30 个月的维生素和微量营养素的血液水平。
我们共纳入了 7 名素食者,其中 4 名为乳蛋素食者(57%),2 名为乳素食者(29%),1 名为乳蛋鱼素食者(14%)。术后 3 年,在接受同等维生素补充剂的情况下,两组的生物学特征相似,包括铁蛋白(p = 0.6)、维生素 B1(p = 0.1)和 B12(p = 0.7)的血水平,而 3 年时的总平均体重减轻量相似(素食者为 39.1%[27.0-46.6],杂食者为 35.7%[10.5-46.5],p = 0.8)。我们发现,在手术前,素食者和杂食者的并发症和营养状况没有显著差异。
似乎在接受减重手术后,服用标准维生素补充剂的素食患者不会比杂食者更容易出现营养缺乏的风险。然而,需要更大的、随访时间更长的研究来证实这些数据,包括对不同类型的素食主义(如纯素食主义)进行评估。