| Περίληψη: | Nutritional status during pregnancy and the effects of nutritional deficiencies on pregnancy outcomes following bariatric surgery is an important issue that warrants further study.
Objective: To investigate pregnancy outcomes and nutritional indices following restrictive and malabsorptive procedures.
Setting: University Hospital, Greece.
Methods: We investigated pregnancy outcomes of 113 women who gave birth to 150 children following biliopancreatic diversion (BPD), Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) and sleeve gastrectomy (SG) between June 1994 and December 2011. Biochemical indices and pregnancy outcomes were compared among the different types of surgery and to overall 20-year hospital data, as well as to 56 pre-surgery pregnancies in 36 women of the same group.
Results: Anemia was observed in 24.2% and 15.6% of pregnancies following BPD and RYGB, respectively. Vitamin B12 levels decreased postoperatively in all groups, with no further decrease during pregnancy; however, low levels were observed not only after BPD (11.7%) and RYGB (15.6%), but also after SG (13.3%). Folic acid levels increased. Serum albumin levels decreased in all groups during pregnancy, but hypoproteinemia was seen only after BPD. Neonates after BPD had significantly lower average birth weight without a higher frequency of low birth weight defined as less than 2500gr. A comparison of neonatal data between babies born before surgery (BS) and siblings born after surgery (AS) showed that AS newborns had lower average birth weight with no significant differences in body length or head circumference and no cases of macrosomia.
Conclusions: Our study showed reasonably good pregnancy outcomes in this sample population following all types of bariatric surgery provided nutritional supplement guidelines are followed. Closer monitoring is required in pregnancies following malabsorptive procedures especially regarding protein nutrition.
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