Bariatric surgery prevents carotid wall thickness progression.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
March 2023
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Lunger, Lukas | |
Sturm, Wolfgang | |
Lamina, Claudia | |
Tschoner, Alexander | |
Engl, Julia | |
Hönlinger, Armin | |
Engler, Clemens | |
Willeit, Peter | |
Kiechl, Stefan | |
Willeit, Johann | |
Öfner, Dietmar | |
Wykypiel, Heinz | |
Tilg, Herbert | |
Ebenbichler, Christoph |
Subject(s)
Series
Wiener klinische Wochenschrift
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0043-5325
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
36205799
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
BACKGROUND
Bariatric surgery is a treatment option for patients with severe obesity and improves parameters of cardiovascular and/or metabolic disease. Carotid intima media thickness (C-IMT) is a surrogate measure of subclinical atherosclerosis. Previous studies showed short to mid-term arrest and even regression of C‑IMT progression following bariatric surgery. We aimed to investigate the long-term effect of weight loss on C‑IMT progression 10 years after bariatric surgery in comparison to a population-based control cohort.
METHODS
In total, 21 eligible patients were examined preoperatively, at 5 and 10 years after bariatric surgery. Anthropometric parameters, plasma triglycerides, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), insulin, and glucose were assessed at all three study visits. C‑IMT was measured via B‑mode scans of the common carotid artery. C‑IMT progression was measured in an age-matched and BMI-matched cohort selected from the population-based Bruneck study to compare with changes in C‑IMT progression after bariatric surgery.
RESULTS
C‑IMT remained stable over the 10-year observation period after bariatric surgery. The control cohort showed a significant C‑IMT progression over 10 years. The difference in C‑IMT progression over 10 years was significant (p < 0.01) between both cohorts.
CONCLUSION
Weight loss induced by bariatric surgery halts the natural progression of C‑IMT over a 10-year observation period.
Bariatric surgery is a treatment option for patients with severe obesity and improves parameters of cardiovascular and/or metabolic disease. Carotid intima media thickness (C-IMT) is a surrogate measure of subclinical atherosclerosis. Previous studies showed short to mid-term arrest and even regression of C‑IMT progression following bariatric surgery. We aimed to investigate the long-term effect of weight loss on C‑IMT progression 10 years after bariatric surgery in comparison to a population-based control cohort.
METHODS
In total, 21 eligible patients were examined preoperatively, at 5 and 10 years after bariatric surgery. Anthropometric parameters, plasma triglycerides, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), insulin, and glucose were assessed at all three study visits. C‑IMT was measured via B‑mode scans of the common carotid artery. C‑IMT progression was measured in an age-matched and BMI-matched cohort selected from the population-based Bruneck study to compare with changes in C‑IMT progression after bariatric surgery.
RESULTS
C‑IMT remained stable over the 10-year observation period after bariatric surgery. The control cohort showed a significant C‑IMT progression over 10 years. The difference in C‑IMT progression over 10 years was significant (p < 0.01) between both cohorts.
CONCLUSION
Weight loss induced by bariatric surgery halts the natural progression of C‑IMT over a 10-year observation period.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| s00508-022-02090-3.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 360 KB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |