Obesity, bariatric surgery, and iron deficiency: true, true, true and related.
Publication/Presentation Date
5-1-2008
Abstract
Morbid obesity is a health problem that has been shown to be refractory to diet, exercise, and medical treatment. Surgeries designed to promote weight loss, termed bariatric surgery and typically involving a gastric bypass procedure, have recently been implemented to treat obesity with high success rates. However, long-term sequelae can result in micronutrient deficiencies. This review will focus on iron deficiency and its association with obesity and bariatric surgery. Iron deficiency develops after gastric bypass for several reasons including intolerance for red meat, diminished gastric acid secretion, and exclusion of the duodenum from the alimentary tract. Menstruating women, pregnant women, and adolescents may be particularly predisposed toward developing iron deficiency and microcytic anemias after bypass surgery. Preoperative assessment of patients should include a complete hematological work-up, including measurement of iron stores. Postoperatively, oral iron prophylaxis and vitamin C in addition to a multivitamin should be prescribed for bypass patients, especially for vulnerable populations. Once iron deficiency has developed, it may prove refractory to oral treatment, and require parenteral iron, blood transfusions, or surgical interventions. Bariatric surgery patients require lifelong follow-up of hematological and iron parameters since iron deficiency and anemia may develop years after surgery.
Volume
83
Issue
5
First Page
403
Last Page
409
ISSN
1096-8652
Published In/Presented At
Love, A. L., & Billett, H. H. (2008). Obesity, bariatric surgery, and iron deficiency: true, true, true and related. American journal of hematology, 83(5), 403–409. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.21106
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
18061940
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article