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Obesity Surgery 1998-Jun

Do arthralgias occur after bilio-intestinal bypass for morbid obesity.

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L Boman
J Linder
M Ericson

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Intestinal bypass operations are used occasionally for treating morbid obesity if other methods are unsuitable. Jejuno-ileal bypass (JIB) operations are considered to be a cause of occasional joint pain related disorders. However, bilio-intestinal bypass (BIB) is intended to avoid the blind loop syndrome. This study compared joint pain disorders in an operated BIB group, an obese nonoperated control group, and a lean reference group.

METHODS

Using a questionnaire in a cross-sectional study, pain disorders were investigated in age-, sex- and weight-matched groups of operated, obese and lean subjects. The operated group had previously had a BIB and was matched using the preoperative BMI (body mass index, kg/m2).

RESULTS

Mean time since operation was 12.4 years (SD 3.4) and the BIB group had lost 15.2 kg/m2 compared with the obese control group. These two groups had a high frequency of pain disorders of similar distribution, differing significantly from the lean reference group. No evidence of major differences in the type of pain disorders could be seen in the two groups.

CONCLUSIONS

Pain disorder was an integral part of an obese syndrome, and was not affected significantly by weight reduction after BIB. The study appears to support the view that approximately 4% of patients develop arthritis vasculitis syndrome after BIB.

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