Artículos de revistas
Intestinal bacterial overgrowth after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
Fecha
2008Registro en:
OBESITY SURGERY, v.18, n.1, p.139-143, 2008
0960-8923
10.1007/s11695-007-9365-y
Autor
MACHADO, Juliana Deh Carvalho
CAMPOS, Camila Scalassara
SILVA, Carolina Lopes Dah
SUEN, Vivian Miguel Marques
NONINO-BORGES, Carla Barbosa
SANTOS, Jose Ernesto Dos
CENEVIVA, Reginaldo
MARCHINI, Julio Sergio
Institución
Resumen
The aim of the present study was to report the occurrence of serious subnutrition, associated to intestinal bacterial overgrowth, in two patients submitted to bariatric surgery. Two female patients (body mass index, 49 and 50 kg/m(2), respectively) were submitted to Y-en-Roux gastric bypass. The first patient evolved a 52% loss of body weight within 21 months after surgery; the other, a 34% loss of initial body weight within 15 months after surgery, results corresponding, respectively, to 62 and 45 kg weight losses. However, both patients reported asthenia, hair fallout, and edema, and one also reported diarrhea, but none was feverish. Their respective albuminemias were of 24 and 23 g/l. A respiratory hydrogen test suggested bacterial hyperproliferation. Thirty days after ciprofloxacin and tetracyclin treatments, they showed improved albumin levels and nutritional states, both confirmed by results of hydrogen breath tests. Bacterial overgrowth is an important complication that can compromise clinical evolution of patients submitted to intestinal surgery like gastroplasty with Y-Roux anastomosis. In cases of clinical suspicion or a confirmed diagnosis, adequate antibiotics, sometimes requiring to be cyclically repeated, should be administered.