Abstract

Obesity is associated with respiratory symptoms and impaired pulmonary function, which could increase the risk of complications after bariatric surgery. The purpose of this study is to assess the relationship between pulmonary function parameters before, and the risk of complications after, laparoscopic bariatric surgery. This prospective study included patients (age 18-60, BMI >35 kg/m2), who were eligible for bariatric surgery. Spirometry was performed in all patients. Complications up to 30 days after bariatric surgery were recorded. Four hundred eighty-five patients were included (304 laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, 181 laparoscopic gastric bypass). There were 53 complications (8 pulmonary, 27 surgical, 14 infectious, 4 other) in 50 patients (10%). There were 35 re-admissions (7.2%), and 17 re-laparoscopies (3.5%). Subjects with and without complications did not differ significantly with respect to demographics, weight, BMI, abdominal circumference or fat percentage. Subjects with complications had a significantly lower mean FEV1 (mean 86.9% predicted) and FVC (95.6% predicted) compared to patients without complications (95.9% predicted, p = 0.005, and 100.1% predicted, p = 0.045, respectively). After adjustment for age, gender, BMI, and smoking, abnormal spirometry value remained the single predictive covariable of postoperative complications: FEV1/FVC <70% adjusted OR 3.1 (95% CI 1.4-6.8, p = 0.006) and ΔFEV1 ≥12 % adjusted OR 2.9 (95% CI 1.3-6.6, p = 0.010). The risk of pulmonary complications after laparoscopic bariatric surgery is low. However, subjects with abnormal spirometry test results have a threefold risk of complications after laparoscopic bariatric surgery. Preoperative pulmonary function testing might be useful to predict the risk of complications of laparoscopic bariatric surgery.

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