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1 n with treatment (as shown by the effects of bariatric surgery).
2 ts were treated with lifestyle counseling or bariatric surgery.
3 hieved a BMI of less than 30 at 1 year after bariatric surgery.
4 ormalization of all of the changes 1 y after bariatric surgery.
5 ere associated with 10-y weight change after bariatric surgery.
6 ith measures of clinical effectiveness after bariatric surgery.
7 dentified 524 patients with HF who underwent bariatric surgery.
8 e risk of 4 common infectious diseases after bariatric surgery.
9 lifestyle intervention, pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery.
10 linical management of the patient undergoing bariatric surgery.
11 n compared with hospitalization rates before bariatric surgery.
12 , and behaviour change, pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery.
13 ill need to better integrate the exposure to bariatric surgery.
14 cted to compare 2 strategies: no surgery and bariatric surgery.
15 at influence long-term weight outcomes after bariatric surgery.
16 sode costs for services around an episode of bariatric surgery.
17  them to 1881 patients with diabetes without bariatric surgery.
18  asthma exacerbation decreased by half after bariatric surgery.
19  risk factors for deliberate self-harm after bariatric surgery.
20 d by insurance were more likely to recommend bariatric surgery.
21 ale sex and a greater willingness to undergo bariatric surgery.
22 data were collected within 30 days preceding bariatric surgery.
23 ply decreased during the first 2 years after bariatric surgery.
24 ophages (ATMs), in obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery.
25 haracteristics and referral to or receipt of bariatric surgery.
26 sary for obtaining the metabolic benefits of bariatric surgery.
27 ent by CMS did not appear to limit access to bariatric surgery.
28 E is among most common causes of death after bariatric surgery.
29 o2) level, and pulmonary complications after bariatric surgery.
30                                              Bariatric surgery.
31 rs for achieving a BMI of less than 30 after bariatric surgery.
32 ) prevents the formation of gallstones after bariatric surgery.
33 than 50 achieved a BMI of less than 30 after bariatric surgery.
34 als might explain diabetes improvement after bariatric surgery.
35 n increase in deliberate self-harm following bariatric surgery.
36  deliberate self-harm hospitalizations after bariatric surgery.
37 th severe obesity as a bridge to traditional bariatric surgery.
38 d mental health disorders, and suicide after bariatric surgery.
39 eficiency anemia, aortic stenosis, and prior bariatric surgery.
40  associated with comorbidity remission after bariatric surgery.
41 s result in denying young children access to bariatric surgery.
42  suspected NAFLD or NASH, or during liver or bariatric surgeries.
43 exacerbation occurred within 12 months after bariatric surgery (10.9%; 95% CI, 9.6% to 12.2%), corres
44               The Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery-2 (LABS-2) study is a multicenter obse
45               The Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery-2 is an observational cohort study at
46 ink involving 2978 patients with a record of bariatric surgery (2005-2012) and a body mass index (cal
47 used data from 11,420 patients who underwent bariatric surgery (2008-2012) from the Michigan Bariatri
48 the most common reason for readmission after bariatric surgery (24.5%) and the second most common rea
49 additional 6.7 years of life expectancy with bariatric surgery (38.4 years with surgery vs 31.7 years
50 ower in the subsequent 13 to 24 months after bariatric surgery (9.9%; adjusted odds ratio: 0.57; p =
51  participants with severe obesity undergoing bariatric surgery, a large percentage experienced improv
52                                        After bariatric surgery, adipocyte autophagic clearance partia
53 s included 2010 obese subjects who underwent bariatric surgery and 1916 contemporaneously matched obe
54 is showed no significant association between bariatric surgery and all-cause mortality in the first y
55 ikely to achieve a BMI of less than 30 after bariatric surgery and are more likely to experience como
56 ings are relevant to women with a history of bariatric surgery and could inform decisions regarding t
57 curred in women who had previously undergone bariatric surgery and for whom presurgery weight was doc
58          No association was detected between bariatric surgery and fractures, cancer, or stroke.
59  10 obese patients with T2D before and after bariatric surgery and in 10 lean control subjects.
60 76 adults with extreme obesity who underwent bariatric surgery and intra-operative liver biopsy.
61 gastrectomy (SG) is an upcoming procedure in bariatric surgery and is currently performed worldwide.
62 ity evidence supports an association between bariatric surgery and lower rates of depression postoper
63 l was compared across patients who underwent bariatric surgery and matched controls using Kaplan-Meie
64 multicenter cohort of adolescents undergoing bariatric surgery and the factors associated with it.
65  HR of 9.29 (95% CI 6.84-12.62), and between bariatric surgery and the resolution of hypertension, wi
66       Strong associations were found between bariatric surgery and the resolution of T2DM, with a HR
67 discharge venous thromboembolism (VTE) after bariatric surgery and to identify potential indications
68 gery should be weighed against its benefits, bariatric surgery and, in particular, gastric bypass or
69 al hernia repair, colectomy, reflux surgery, bariatric surgery, and hysterectomy).
70 y candidates and patients who have undergone bariatric surgery, and they suggest that the utility of
71 wledge about the safety and effectiveness of bariatric surgery are important barriers to bariatric su
72 ed with obesity and respective changes after bariatric surgery are incompletely understood.
73 erative gastrointestinal complications after bariatric surgery are potentially modifiable risk factor
74                          Pharmacotherapy and bariatric surgery are promising interventions for people
75 t, whereas short-term outcomes of adolescent bariatric surgery are promising.
76                        Medicare payments for bariatric surgery are significantly lower at hospitals w
77 hese outcomes among women who have undergone bariatric surgery are unclear.
78 nt concerns about the outcomes and safety of bariatric surgery as a barrier to undergoing it.
79       We included obese adults who underwent bariatric surgery as an instrument of weight reduction.
80                                              Bariatric surgery as delivered in the UK healthcare syst
81                            Pregnancies after bariatric surgery, as compared with matched control preg
82  adolescence, in the Follow-up of Adolescent Bariatric Surgery at 5 Plus Years (FABS-5+) extension st
83  ejection fraction (LVEF) <50% who underwent bariatric surgery at a tertiary center 2004 to 2013.
84 r tissues from 113 obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery at academic hospitals in Europe (Antwe
85 claims data of 145527 patients who underwent bariatric surgery at bariatric centers of excellence bet
86 and foregut surgery puts patients undergoing bariatric surgery at high risk for postoperative pulmona
87 e patients with biopsy-proven NASH underwent bariatric surgery at the University Hospital of Lille, F
88 tes mellitus (T2DM) after different types of bariatric surgery based on data from general practice ha
89 National Coverage Determination manual, that bariatric surgery be performed only in hospitals that ha
90 erapies, such as behavioral modifications or bariatric surgery, before pancreas transplantation is co
91 ations, of each individual who had undergone bariatric surgery between 2007 and 2011 in Western Austr
92 ho underwent elective primary and revisional bariatric surgery between 2007 and 2012.
93  of 38,374 Medicare beneficiaries undergoing bariatric surgery between 2011 and 2013.
94 5 adults from Ontario, Canada, who underwent bariatric surgery between April 1, 2006, and March 31, 2
95   A total of 27320 adults undergoing primary bariatric surgery between June 2006 and May 2015 at teac
96       We enrolled 242 adolescents undergoing bariatric surgery between March 2007 and February 2012 a
97                                              Bariatric surgery (BS) is currently the most effective t
98 feeding, recent psychiatric hospitalization, bariatric surgery, cancer, heart attack, or stroke.
99 se of alcohol, smoking, and illegal drugs in bariatric surgery candidates and patients who have under
100 n and past suicide attempts, are frequent in bariatric surgery candidates.
101                        Even among accredited bariatric surgery centers, wide variation exists in rate
102 007 through February 2012 at 5 US adolescent bariatric surgery centers.
103 e set for the Benefits and Adverse events in BARIAtric surgery Clinical Trials (BARIACT) as a solutio
104 iatric surgery (2008-2012) from the Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative (39 hospitals).
105   The study was conducted using the Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative, a prospective clinical
106 rospective study used data from the Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative, a statewide quality imp
107 issions were found in patients who underwent bariatric surgery compared with 4.9 diabetes mellitus re
108 in the VA health system, those who underwent bariatric surgery compared with matched control patients
109       Among 56277 obese adults who underwent bariatric surgery, compared to presurgery months 13-24 a
110                 Widening the availability of bariatric surgery could lead to substantial health benef
111 y intake and macronutrient composition after bariatric surgery could predict 10-y weight change.Parti
112  percentage of female patients who underwent bariatric surgery decreased from 80.4% to 78.1% (P < .00
113                                              Bariatric surgery determines similar diabetes remission
114                                       Age at bariatric surgery, duration of T2DM, and preoperative C-
115 20 (25%) of 81 adolescent controls underwent bariatric surgery during the 5-year follow-up.
116          A total of 12062 patients underwent bariatric surgery during the study period with a mean fo
117 e is known about comorbidity remission after bariatric surgery during typical clinical care across di
118      This study shows that the assessment of bariatric surgery focuses largely on adverse events and
119          To assess the cost-effectiveness of bariatric surgery for adolescents with obesity using rec
120 ective hazard ratios (HRs) were detected for bariatric surgery for incident T2DM, 0.68 (95% CI 0.55-0
121 sually adhered to in most centers performing bariatric surgery for obesity.
122 aper, we examine evidence on the efficacy of bariatric surgery for pancreatic, renal, retinal, periph
123 cribes the largest long-term study examining bariatric surgery for patients with early-onset T2DM.
124 tle is known about the long-term outcomes of bariatric surgery for severe adolescent obesity, raising
125                    The fundamental basis for bariatric surgery for the purpose of accomplishing weigh
126                                              Bariatric surgery for the treatment of adolescents with
127 brosis; our results highlight the promise of bariatric surgery for treating NASH and underscore the n
128 ions remain about the role and durability of bariatric surgery for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
129 ed a guideline that recommended weight loss (bariatric) surgery for all patients with a body mass ind
130 data, 38,776 patients, who underwent primary bariatric surgery from 2010 to 2013, were analyzed.
131 l patients older than 18 years, who received bariatric surgery from April 2009 to March 2012.
132 spectively identified patients who underwent bariatric surgery from January 1, 2006, through December
133 nts (</=19 years of age) who were undergoing bariatric surgery from March 2007 through February 2012
134  clinical trial enrolled patients undergoing bariatric surgery from May 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016.
135 0 severely obese diabetic patients (4185 had bariatric surgery) from 3 HMO Research Network sites; (2
136 d psoriatic arthritis in patients undergoing bariatric surgery (gastric bypass and gastric banding).
137 red) of less than 30 is an important goal of bariatric surgery, given the increased risk for weight-r
138 e molecular mechanisms underlying successful bariatric surgery, gives reason to be optimistic that no
139         Patients with diabetes who underwent bariatric surgery had an 18-fold increased chance for T2
140             Finally, in a subgroup analysis, bariatric surgery had no effect on MBH T2 hyperintensity
141                                              Bariatric surgery has been recommended for weight loss a
142  this certification requirement on access to bariatric surgery has been reported only anecdotally.
143                                              Bariatric surgery has been well recognized for its effec
144  measured against long-term safety outcomes, bariatric surgery has low mortality and morbidity associ
145             Pretransplant and intraoperative bariatric surgeries have been performed, but large rando
146 ance: Up to one-third of patients undergoing bariatric surgery have a body mass index (BMI) of more t
147       Few long-term or controlled studies of bariatric surgery have been conducted to date.
148                   Recent research efforts on bariatric surgery have focused on metabolic and diabetes
149 ditions may be common among patients seeking bariatric surgery; however, the prevalence of these cond
150 HR = 2.76), recent chemotherapy (HR = 2.04), bariatric surgery (HR = 1.78), smoking history (HR = 1.7
151          Accumulating evidence suggests that bariatric surgery improves survival among patients with
152             These data provide evidence that bariatric surgery in adolescents with severe obesity is
153    In this multicenter, prospective study of bariatric surgery in adolescents, we found significant i
154  loss being the underlying justification for bariatric surgery in ameliorating CVD risk, current evid
155 s currently the only selection criterion for bariatric surgery in diabetic subjects.
156 e routine use of IS is not recommended after bariatric surgery in its current implementation.
157 needed to determine the long-term effects of bariatric surgery in morbidly obese patients with NASH.
158                                              Bariatric surgery in obese patients not only improved th
159    Rapid weight loss and malabsorption after bariatric surgery in patients with NAFLD or steatohepati
160 rmine the biological and clinical effects of bariatric surgery in patients with NASH.
161                               The effects of bariatric surgery in patients with nonalcoholic fatty li
162 ized trials designed to assess the impact of bariatric surgery in patients with obesity and hypertens
163 oncerns regarding the safety and efficacy of bariatric surgery in prepubertal children.
164  mechanisms underlying, and indications for, bariatric surgery in the reduction of cardiovascular dis
165 clinical registry of 40 hospitals performing bariatric surgery in the state of Michigan.
166 omes and expenditures in patients undergoing bariatric surgery in the United States.
167     More than half of adolescents undergoing bariatric surgery in this cohort had NAFLD, yet the prev
168 s well as the possible metabolic benefits of bariatric surgery in this serious disease.
169 tified 2500 patients (74% men) who underwent bariatric surgery in Veterans Affairs (VA) bariatric cen
170 vention and pharmacotherapy are eligible for bariatric surgery, including Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, s
171                                              Bariatric surgery incurs substantial initial cost and mo
172        The levels of serum BA increase after bariatric surgery independently from caloric restriction
173                                              Bariatric surgery induced the disappearance of NASH from
174      In conclusion, exercise superimposed on bariatric surgery-induced weight loss enhances mitochond
175       Even larger effects are reported after bariatric surgery-induced weight loss in NAFLD, where 80
176                                 Furthermore, bariatric surgery-induced weight loss was accompanied by
177  in obese patients gradually recovered after bariatric surgery-induced weight loss.
178                                  Importance: Bariatric surgery induces significant weight loss for se
179                                              Bariatric surgery induces weight loss, the extent of whi
180                       Our data indicate that bariatric surgery, irrespective of the specific kind of
181 contributors to metabolic improvements after bariatric surgeries is bile acids (BAs).
182 revention of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in bariatric surgery is a contentious issue.
183 on surgical procedures in the United States, bariatric surgery is a major focus of policy reforms aim
184                   Our findings indicate that bariatric surgery is associated with a decline in the ra
185              This study investigated whether bariatric surgery is associated with a decreased rate of
186        We sought to test the hypothesis that bariatric surgery is associated with a rapid and sustain
187                                              Bariatric surgery is associated with increased risk attr
188                           Weight loss before bariatric surgery is associated with marked reduction of
189                                              Bariatric surgery is associated with sustained weight lo
190                                              Bariatric surgery is becoming a more widespread treatmen
191                                        Early bariatric surgery is controversial but has great potenti
192                                              Bariatric surgery is effective in reducing all-cause and
193                                              Bariatric surgery is increasingly considered for the tre
194                                              Bariatric surgery is increasingly recognized as a safe a
195 Randomised controlled trials have shown that bariatric surgery is more effective than conventional tr
196                  The quality of follow-up in bariatric surgery is quite variable with recent systemat
197                                     Although bariatric surgery is the most cost-effective treatment f
198                                              Bariatric surgery is the most effective therapy for seve
199                                              Bariatric surgery is the most effective treatment for se
200                                              Bariatric surgery is the most successful strategy for tr
201                                              Bariatric surgery is the only definitive solution curren
202 f surgical skill on long-term outcomes after bariatric surgery is unknown.
203 , and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery issued a guideline that recommended we
204 ken together, these results demonstrate that bariatric surgery leads to enhanced splanchnic vascular
205                                              Bariatric surgery leads to many desirable metabolic chan
206  perioperative complications associated with bariatric surgery led to the establishment of accreditat
207                   Only 40% of studies in the bariatric surgery literature meet criteria for adequate
208          We aim to systematically review the bariatric surgery literature with regards to adequacy of
209                                              Bariatric surgery may achieve better and more long-lasti
210             Metabolic changes after maternal bariatric surgery may affect subsequent fetal developmen
211                      At experienced centers, bariatric surgery may be a safe and effective interventi
212                                              Bariatric surgery may be an effective but expensive trea
213 ndings suggest that long-term outcomes after bariatric surgery may be less dependent on a surgeon's o
214                                              Bariatric surgery may induce remission of psoriasis, but
215 ors investigated whether weight loss through bariatric surgery may reduce the risk of new-onset atria
216                                Metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) leads to weight loss in obese in
217 inkage Unit records, all patients undergoing bariatric surgery (n = 12062) in Western Australia were
218 cipants completed a 400-m walk test prior to bariatric surgery (n = 206) and at 6 months (n = 195), 1
219                         Outcome reporting in bariatric surgery needs uniformity.
220                  Metabolic improvement after bariatric surgery occurs before substantial weight loss.
221 ter gastrointestinal motility, the effect of bariatric surgery on diabetes remission, and the potenti
222 e metabolic changes, but long-term impact of bariatric surgery on life expectancy in patients with di
223 patients registered in the database and with bariatric surgery on or before 31 December 2014 were inc
224 e data regarding facilitators or barriers to bariatric surgery or if they reported statistical associ
225 rtality found no protective association with bariatric surgery overall, with a HR of 0.97 (95% CI 0.6
226     Furthermore, weight-loss intervention by bariatric surgery partially reversed obesity-associated
227                                We identified bariatric surgery patients aged 18 to 64 years who under
228                                              Bariatric surgery patients exhibited rapid weight loss f
229 To test this, we genotyped rs58542926 in 983 bariatric surgery patients from the Geisinger Medical Ce
230    Mental health conditions are common among bariatric surgery patients-in particular, depression and
231 ed with insulin resistance in morbidly obese bariatric surgery patients.
232 s and 5.7 (4.2-7.8) per 1000 person-years in bariatric surgery patients; the adjusted hazard ratio wa
233  with type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 27 to 43, bariatric surgery plus intensive medical therapy was mor
234 tal complications in women with a history of bariatric surgery (postoperative mothers [POMs]) by comp
235  restriction that is achieved at 0.5 y after bariatric surgery predicts long-term weight loss.
236  payments among Medicare patients undergoing bariatric surgery procedures.
237                                              Bariatric surgery promotes type 2 diabetes (T2D) remissi
238                   With increased obesity and bariatric surgery rates, prevalence of cobalamin deficie
239 ompared with usual care, weight loss through bariatric surgery reduced the risk of atrial fibrillatio
240                            The rationale for bariatric surgery reducing CVD events is discussed and j
241                             Using the German Bariatric Surgery Registry, data from more than 11,800 S
242                    Fat reduction mediated by bariatric surgery repairs obesity-associated T2D.
243                                              Bariatric surgery represents an effective strategy for b
244                                              Bariatric surgery results in notable weight loss and all
245  most severely obese patients with diabetes, bariatric surgery seems to improve life expectancy; howe
246 rom 93 obese subjects who underwent elective bariatric surgery, showed that expression of CETP is mar
247                  Furthermore, we showed that bariatric surgery (sleeve gastrectomy and proximal and d
248 ed laparoscopic abdominal surgery, including bariatric surgery (sleeve gastrectomy, Roux-en-Y gastric
249                                       In the bariatric surgery strategy, patients were subjected to r
250                                              Bariatric surgery, stratified by type of surgery (gastri
251              Population-based data show that bariatric surgery strongly increases the chance for remi
252          The Teen-Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery Study is a prospective, multicenter, o
253 lts from the Teen-Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery study.
254 ata from the Teen-Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery study.
255  observational study, 20 surgeons performing bariatric surgery submitted videos; surgeons were ranked
256                                              Bariatric surgeries, such as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass an
257 tory of atrial fibrillation, 2,000 underwent bariatric surgery (surgery group), and 2,021 matched obe
258              Teen-Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery (Teen-LABS) is a prospective, observat
259        Among patients seeking and undergoing bariatric surgery, the most common mental health conditi
260 e subsequent period of 13 to 24 months after bariatric surgery, the risk remained significantly lower
261                                        After bariatric surgery there is a dramatic increase in gut ho
262 height in meters squared) above 25 underwent bariatric surgery to ameliorate T2DM between January 1,
263 s to summarise existing outcome reporting in bariatric surgery, to inform the development of a core o
264 o improve outcome selection and reporting in bariatric surgery trials.
265 lem of obesity and the consequential rise in bariatric surgery, uncertainty remains as to whether thi
266 isk of self-harm emergencies increased after bariatric surgery, underscoring the need for screening f
267    Policies and practice patterns that delay bariatric surgery until the BMI is 50 or greater can res
268                     For each pregnancy after bariatric surgery, up to five control pregnancies were m
269  bariatric surgery are important barriers to bariatric surgery use.
270 ith asthma aged 18 to 54 years who underwent bariatric surgery using the population-based emergency d
271 tudy of obese patients with HF who underwent bariatric surgery, using the population-based emergency
272                Importance: Weight loss after bariatric surgery varies, yet preoperative clinical fact
273 istic regression models as inputs to compare bariatric surgery versus no surgical treatment for sever
274                        More than 80% of post-bariatric surgery VTE events occurred post-discharge.
275                      Lack of knowledge about bariatric surgery was a barrier in 2 studies.
276                                              Bariatric surgery was associated with an improvement in
277                                              Bariatric surgery was associated with reduced risks of g
278 ased incidence of deliberate self-harm after bariatric surgery was not observed.
279                                              Bariatric surgery was, however, consistently associated
280                    Among patients undergoing bariatric surgery, we found a prevalence of 19.1% for T2
281           In the first 12-month period after bariatric surgery, we observed a nonsignificantly reduce
282 not achieve successful weight outcomes after bariatric surgery.We examined whether short-term changes
283 study was to measure the association between bariatric surgery, weight, body mass index, and obesity-
284 T) samples obtained from subjects undergoing bariatric surgery were analyzed by qRT-PCR for expressio
285       A total of 2010 patients who underwent bariatric surgery were included in the study.
286        Adults with severe obesity undergoing bariatric surgery were recruited between February 2005 a
287                  Hospitalization rates after bariatric surgery were substantially reduced for all-cau
288                                  Outcomes of bariatric surgery were then examined at the patient leve
289          Patients were more likely to pursue bariatric surgery when it was recommended by referring p
290 TI and respiratory infection decreased after bariatric surgery whereas that of intra-abdominal infect
291 us on the weight-loss independent effects of bariatric surgery, which encompass energy expenditure an
292  concern and can be effectively treated with bariatric surgery, which is expensive and invasive.
293          Among obese participants with T2DM, bariatric surgery with 2 years of an adjunctive low-leve
294 o study has investigated the relationship of bariatric surgery with the risk of infectious diseases a
295 nrandomized) prospective trial that compared bariatric surgery with usual care for obese patients.
296 cal therapy prompted two patients to undergo bariatric surgery, with remarkably beneficial consequenc
297 th weight gain and a quarter of patients had bariatric surgery within 5 years.
298 This study identified an unequal delivery of bariatric surgery within Ontario.
299              We evaluated regional access to bariatric surgery within the high-volume, center of exce
300 n of academic general surgery is composed of bariatric surgery, yet surgical training does not suffic

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