Abstract
IntroductionThe aim of this study was to evaluate cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk modification in patients with optimal weight loss (OWL) versus suboptimal weight loss SWL following MBS. MethodsThis was a retrospective analysis. The 10-year risk CVD was estimated before and after one year of surgery using the “Framingham Score”. Results191 patients were included in our study. Mean baseline Framingham score was 7.2 ± 6.9%. According to the score, 54% of patients were classified as low risk (n = 104), 23% as moderate (n = 43), 20% moderately high (n = 39) and 3% as high risk (n = 5). One year after surgery, 91% of the patients showed reduction of their Framingham score. Mean CVD risk score decreased significantly to 4.1 ± 3.7% when compared to baseline (p-value is < 0.001); 80% of patients classified as low risk (n = 153), 13% as moderate (n = 25), 7% moderately high (n = 13) and 0% as high risk (n = 0). ConclusionWeight loss after bariatric surgery reduces CVD risk scores and the magnitude of effect correlates with the degree of weight loss.
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