Background: Severe obesity causes hemodynamic changes in the circulatory system, which leads to the development of heart failure with either preserved or reduced ejection fraction. Weight loss achieved through bariatric surgery is likely to possibly reverse many of hemodynamic and structural abnormalities caused by obesity. Hypothesis: Right and left ventricular parameters of heart failure and function improve as soon as 3 months after surgery. Methods: Detailed echocardiographic parameters assessing left and right ventricular function in severely obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery were analyzed. The following parameters of left and right ventricular function were compared in the examinations performed before, 3 and 6 months after surgery: left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), LV and RV global longitudinal strain (GLS), peak early (e’) and late (a’) diastolic annular velocities (lateral and septal) with calculation of E/e’ ratios, left atrium volume index ( LAVI), TRV (tricuspid regurgitation velocity), tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), maximum systolic velocity of the lateral part of the tricuspid annulus-s’ and accelerated pulmonary time (AcT). Results: Forty obese patients (76% women) with mean BMI 40.3 (SD 5.6) and mean age of 42.4 (SD 11.9) years were enrolled. BMI as 6 months was 31.2 (SD 5.1). Baseline and follow-up results of echocardiography are presented for both left and right ventricular parameters in Table 1 and Table 2. Conclusions: Only GLS for right and left ventricle, FWS and TRV improve siginicantly within 6 months from bariatric surgery. On the other hand, these changes are significant as early as 3 months after bariatric surgery.
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