Anchorage Bariatrics Surgical Videos

Non-Surgical faq videos

  • What Non-Surgical Options Are Available?

    There are some minimally invasive procedures such as the Intragastric Balloon. That is something where you would see a surgeon and it's done through an endoscopic approach. We don't make any incisions, but patients are generally under anesthesia. They do have a scope that goes down their mouth into the stomach and we place a balloon there and that stays for six months and then comes out later.


    Although there are some limitations to the amount of weight loss, we do know that that is a very safe procedure and that's something that some people opt for sort of a mid-road that's not as invasive as surgery, but a little more invasive than some of the other things.


    Those other things would include medications. There are several medications available on the market that have been shown to help people to lose weight. Being prescribed weight-loss medications does require a detailed visit with one of our providers, either an MD or a medical doctor, or one of our Physician Associates who is skilled and experienced in prescribing these medications and in applying them to the right patient, the right situation.


    Medication-assisted weight loss also will generally entail seeing a dietitian and for some patients, seeing a psychologist depending on what their need and want is to help support them through their weight-loss process with the medication.


    The medications tend to work by limiting folks’ appetites and by improving how the body handles calories to some extent. We do know from many studies again that the average weight loss from these medications with 6 to 12 months of use ranges between about 25 and 35 pounds. But again, that's simply an average. Every patient is an individual, of course, and these medications can be used to differing effects in different people.


    And so, really, the non-surgical options have the ability to be used also in concert with surgical options. So, if somebody opted to do a medical or medication-assisted weight-loss program, that certainly doesn't preclude them from doing surgery at some point in the future. Having had surgery in the past also doesn't preclude you from doing a medication-assisted weight loss program moving forward if you meet the criteria for appropriateness for having those medications.


    So, it's not an uncommon thing where we see people who've had surgery in the past who decide to come in and have a non-surgical medication-assisted program.


    The nice thing with that is that these medications, at least in several smaller studies… (We're waiting on some larger ones to be completed, so we have even better information on them.) These smaller studies indicate that most people who have had surgery and then take medications lose even more weight than the average person who takes the same medications who hasn't had a surgery in the past.

MEDICATION ASSISTED WEIGHT LOSS

  • What Is The Goal For Weight Loss Using Medication?

    The goal for weight loss using medications is to provide an adjunct to diet and activity for people.


    There's a lot of hormonal factors and environmental factors and genetic factors that tend to contribute to the need to lose weight. And so, the medications just provide us another tool to combat those factors and help people be successful.

  • What Medications Do You Use In Your Program?

    We actually have a lot of different medications that we offer to our patients. We do have appetite suppressants, we have metabolic boosters, and we have other medications that will help regulate blood sugars and overall hunger.


    It really depends on each patient's individual struggles and other comorbidities as far as which medications we choose for them.

  • How Do You Decide Which Medication Is Right For Me?

    The way we decide which medication is right for each patient is by getting to know our patients, listening to their stories, and figuring out what they're struggling with.


    If someone's really hungry, we tend to go for more of a satiety medication. If it's cravings, we might use something different.


    There are also some things that we can do with dietary choices that can help with that.


    Then, if people have other conditions - that they have diabetes, or migraine headaches, some of the medications actually have a dual function and they'll treat those issues as well as provide us some weight loss. And so, we tend to go with those medication choices for people as well.

DIETARY/NUTRITION PROGRAMS

  • What Role Does a Dietitian Play?

    A dietitian is important as part of the bariatric surgery process to educate a patient on what the diet is going to look like after surgery, what the diet is going to look like before surgery, why the changes are important, and what small steps that they can start making now to make sure that they develop the proper habits and the mindset to make that tool something that will last them a lifetime.

  • Why Is Taking A Multivitamin Required?

    Taking a multivitamin is necessary after bariatric surgery because of how people are digesting food and the amount of food that you are taking in, all of the changes. It is very easy to become deficient or really low in certain vitamins that can then cause some pretty big issues.


    So, the idea of taking the bariatric-specific multivitamin is that those vitamins are made to prevent those deficiencies from happening. Because they're made specifically for that, you may have to take one or two of those vitamins a day versus if you were to do an over-the-counter multi, you might have to take anywhere from four to six a day.


    So, the idea of taking a bariatric multivitamin after surgery is to simply prevent deficiencies from happening.

  • What Is The Process For Developing a Dietary Plan?

    The process for developing a dietary plan is basically sitting down and talking with somebody. That is the key to everything. It's not cookie cutter. It is getting to know the person, getting to know their food preferences, getting to know their lifestyle, getting to know their history, and then working with them to create a plan that is going to work for them both in the short and the long term.


    We're not looking to put people on specialized fad diets. We're looking to create something that is going to be sustainable and long-lasting.

Surgical videos

surgery types

  • What Is Bariatric And Metabolic Surgery?

    Metabolic and bariatric surgery is a term that applies to different surgical procedures that change the body's weight and metabolism. It's commonly referred to as weight-loss operations.


    But what it does really is not only alters the size of your stomach, which reduces how much you can eat, but it changes the hormones and the body's metabolism, which helps the body maintain a healthy weight.

  • What Are The Surgical Options Available?

    The types of surgery that we most commonly perform are the Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy, Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass, and the Laparoscopic Duodenal Switch or Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch and there's a couple modified versions of that operation using slightly less-lengthy procedures.


    The most common of those is called a Single Anastomosis Duodenal Ileostomy - which is medical talk for a single anastomosis or single connection version of the duodenal switch.

  • What Is a Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy?

    A laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is a type of bariatric surgery, done to treat obesity, that involves a laparoscopic approach.


    That's a minimally invasive or less invasive surgical approach where we make four or five small incisions and use long, thin instruments and a narrow, long camera to look into the abdominal cavity without making a large incision and to do different manipulations without making large incisions.


    So, the sleeve gastrectomy portion is often misunderstood because people have heard about other types of sleeve operations that involve, you know, putting material in, over or folding things over within the body to create sort of a sleeve. But, the sleeve gastrectomy is really conceptually pretty simple. What we're doing with that is cutting and dividing and sealing closed the stomach right up the middle in a longitudinal direction - so going from the bottom to the top of the stomach, and it turns the remaining portion of the stomach into the shape of a jacket sleeve. So it has this long, narrow curved shape.


    The other portion of the stomach, about two-thirds to three-quarters of the volume of the stomach, is then removed from the body completely. That then has the effect of changing the body's biology that tends to drive this disease of obesity to become healthier.


    It helps people to lose weight, yes, but also to improve some of the medical problems that come along with obesity, such as high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and has a positive effect on diabetes as well.

  • What Is A Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass?

    A Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass is a type of bariatric surgery or surgeries that we do to treat obesity and the diseases related to obesity.


    Laparoscopic means that the surgery is done in a minimally invasive approach, meaning that we use several small incisions, usually 4 or 5 small incisions, to re-align the flow of food through the gastrointestinal tract.


    Gastric bypass implies that we are bypassing a large portion of the stomach. We cut the top portion of the stomach away from the rest of the stomach, then we sew a part of the middle of the intestine to the top portion of the stomach. So after surgery, when someone drinks or eats their food, it does enter the top of the stomach but then it goes straight into the middle of the intestine, therefore, bypassing the stomach and the very top portion of the intestinal tract.


    What that leads to is several different hormonal and other biologic function changes in the body that make people less likely to eat, or want to eat, or have the drive or desire to eat, and to limit cravings for foods that are high in sugars or carbohydrates, things that we know are not advantageous for weight loss. It seems to also have effects to directly change how the body handles calories, and so may directly have effect for weight loss.


    Some of the older ideas about how bypass surgery works, including malabsorption and restriction which is, you know, you have a smaller stomach so you can't eat as much at one time, are really not the main thrust of how these surgeries work.


    As we've learned more about the biology surrounding bariatric surgery, they do play minor roles, but the main change, the main way that we encourage weight loss after surgery is by changing the body's basic physiologic functions.

  • What Services Do You Offer For Lap Band?

    The services that Anchorage Bariatrics offers in regards to a lap-band is maintenance of a lap-band and removal of the lap-band. We no longer place lap-bands because the data has shown that most people don't have significant weight loss in the long term.

COMMON SURGICAL QUESTIONS

  • What Should I Expect In The Initial Consultation?

    During the very initial consultation, I make sure I take the time to really get to know my patients. I like to learn about their full medical history, full surgical history, and the struggles that they've had with their weight loss journey.


    It oftentimes takes them years and years before they're able to come and see us. And when seeing them, I ask them their expectations. How much weight are they trying to lose? What are their main goals that they're trying to achieve? What are some of the resolutions of medical comorbidities that they're looking at?


    Then, I present them with a couple of the surgical options. I also touch base about non-surgical options and see which one would serve them best.


    When deciding on the type of surgical procedure, I make sure that I go through all the options with my patients and align their goals with the goals of the procedure and see whether we can achieve them in a reasonable and reliable fashion.


    For example, not every surgical procedure would be a good procedure for certain patients. So, certain medical conditions may be prohibitive. The most common procedures include Sleeve Gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass.


    Sleeve Gastrectomy is better served for patients who have a lot of medical problems versus Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass may be better served for patients who have bad diabetes or bad reflux.


    Overall, it's a stepwise process and we have to take into consideration patient preferences, their medical history, as well as the realistic outcomes of the surgical procedure.

  • How Do You Determine Which Surgical Options Are Best For Me?

    So how we determine which surgical procedure is best for which patient is really by looking at the medical conditions that that patient has that tend to come along with this problem of obesity.


    The different surgeries that we do for obesity have slightly different effects on some of these

    other medical problems that come along with obesity. Whereas, gastric bypass is particularly good for patients with diabetes or severe gastroesophageal reflux or heartburn, it may not be the right answer for patients who don't have those problems as part of their complex of diseases that come along with obesity.


    So, we try to match up the type of surgery with the medical problems that a certain patient has.

  • Who Qualifies For Bariatric Surgery?

    There are many considerations as to who qualifies for bariatric surgery. The main ones are generated by your body mass index, which is a ratio of your height to your weight. A body mass index above 40 would qualify someone for surgery.


    Someone may qualify if they have a BMI of 35 to 40 if they also have weight-related comorbidities. This includes diabetes, high blood pressure on multiple occasions, heart disease, obstructive sleep apnea, and liver disease.

  • How Much Weight Will I Lose?

    How much weight one loses after having bariatric surgery is a difficult thing to answer in terms of a specific number.


    In medicine in general, we look at things based on the research results that we have. Unfortunately, research results done by studying a large group of people who either take the same medicine or have the same surgery only gives us averages.


    So, I can't tell any patient exactly how much weight they're going to lose, but I can give them a range of the average amount of weight that similar people have lost when they've undergone the surgery in the past.


    Luckily, in bariatric surgery, we have many, many research studies over the last many years, over several decades, that have followed people out in the long term, so we have pretty good data to give us these really robust averages.


    On average, people will lose around a third of their total body weight. For many people, that's over 100 pounds. But, once we are able to talk with a patient, get their weight and their height, we can give much more accurate estimates as to the average amount of weight loss someone in their shape can expect to lose after surgery.

  • What Does The Recovery Process Include?

    Well, the recovery process after bariatric surgery usually involves either going home the same day or spending one night in the hospital.


    The vast majority of people are doing well enough within that timeframe to be able to go home. Now, that's not to say it's not surgery, right? Because it is, it still has some pain. A lot of folks do have some nausea, but those things usually are very treatable with the medications we give people standardly after these operations and tend to do much better after a couple of days of recovery.


    Most patients are then really working on learning their new diet. We do have folks on a modified liquid diet for the first couple weeks after surgery, but almost everybody's ready to get back to work within a couple weeks of surgery.

  • What Are The Bariatric Comorbidities?

    Comorbidity can be a pretty scary term to hear initially, especially when you come in for a consultation. But, I want to reassure you that it's nothing more than just a doctor's term that is used to describe other medical conditions that patients often present with in addition to morbid obesity.


    For example, there is a constellation of symptoms that go hand in hand with being obese, or having extra weight, and those are called metabolic syndromes. They represent a constellation of symptoms under that umbrella.


    They can include hypertension or high blood pressure, high cholesterol, as well as diabetes. Some of the other more common comorbid or additional medical problems that we often see include obstructive sleep apnea, fatty liver, in addition to many others.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES

  • What Role Does A Psychologist Play

    Well, the role of the psychologist is really an important one. Actually, on the team, we provide the initial psychological evaluation as well as provide ongoing psychological services for patients when needed.

  • Why Is A Psych Eval Necessary?

    A psychological evaluation is very important. We need to assess the patient of whether they're psychologically appropriate at that time for surgery.


    Also, since bariatric surgery is considered an elective surgery in most states still, many insurance companies require that qualifying evaluation.

  • How Does The Psych Eval Work?

    The psychological evaluation process is not yet standardized across the states. And so, as a result, there's a variety of different styles among providers.


    I can tell you about the method I use and it includes a comprehensive interview with the patient, preferably in person, via Zoom if needed.


    It also includes the administration of various assessment tools such as the Beck’s Depression Inventory, Diet Readiness Test, and other assessments as well.


    A typical psychological evaluation takes between one and a half to three hours.