Significant Promising Effects of Bariatric Surgery on the Biochemical Control of Glycemia and Lipidemia in Diabetic Patients in Western Saudi Arabia: A Tertiary Center Experience and a Retrospective Study
Ibrahim Abdel-Rahman, Abdulhamid Awadh Alharbi, Maryam Zain Alsaedi, Noof Mejzi Alamri Alharbi, Sajidah Basheer Al-Mughassil, Zainab Anwar Al-Bahar, Abdel-Raheem Donkol, Hussam Baghdadi, Mariam Eid Alanzi, Salah Mohamed El Sayed

TL;DR
Bariatric surgery significantly improves blood sugar and lipid levels in diabetic patients in Saudi Arabia, offering a promising treatment for obesity-related conditions.
Contribution
The study introduces novel clinical and biochemical therapeutic indices to quantify the effectiveness of bariatric surgery in diabetic patients.
Findings
Bariatric surgery led to significant reductions in BMI, HbA1C, total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides.
Serum HDL levels increased significantly after surgery, indicating improved lipid profiles.
The novel therapeutic indices showed substantial improvements in metabolic parameters following surgery.
Abstract
Background: The prevalence of obesity has increased globally and is associated with many comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes and fatty liver and cardiovascular diseases. Bariatric surgery is considered an effective intervention for achieving weight loss and controlling lipidemia and glycemia. Objectives: This Saudi retrospective observational study evaluates the clinical and biochemical benefits following bariatric surgery to obese diabetic patients. Methodology: After gaining ethical committee approval, data was collected from the patients' medical records at a tertiary medical center (King Fahad General Hospital, Al-Madinah Al-Munawwarah, Saudi Arabia). The total sample size was 61 patients, of whom 78.33% (n=48) had a body mass index (BMI) of 40 or greater (obese class III). Results: Following bariatric surgery, there were statistically significant reductions (p<0.001) in BMI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Diet and metabolism studies · Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins
