Brief Psychotherapeutic and Psychopharmacological Interventions as Facilitators of Bariatric Surgery Success in Patients on the Anxious-Impulsive Spectrum: A Pilot Study
Í. Alberdi-Páramo, M. Navas Tejedor, M. Paz Otero, J. Sánchez- Rodríguez, D. Gimeno Álvarez

TL;DR
This pilot study explores how combining brief therapy and medication can improve bariatric surgery outcomes for patients with anxiety and impulsivity.
Contribution
The study investigates the combined use of psychotherapy and psychopharmacology to enhance bariatric surgery success in anxious-impulsive patients.
Findings
Combined psychotherapeutic and pharmacological interventions showed potential to improve pre-surgery weight loss.
The approach was feasible and suggested possible benefits for bariatric outcomes in anxious-impulsive patients.
Abstract
Patients undergoing bariatric surgery often present with impulsive behavior and symptoms of anxiety. In this context, brief psychotherapeutic interventions such as nutritional education, cognitive restructuring, and behavioral activation have been shown to enhance pre-surgery weight loss and improve the likelihood of successful surgical outcomes. Furthermore, anorexigenic pharmacological treatments involving fluoxetine, bupropion, naltrexone, eslicarbazepine, zonisamide, and topiramate have been associated with increased success rates of the bariatric intervention. To assess the impact of brief psychotherapeutic interventions and psychopharmacological treatments on the success of bariatric surgery in anxious-impulsive patients, investigating the effectiveness of combined strategies in enhancing preoperative weight loss and surgical outcomes. Within the framework of a third-level…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes
