Surgery for Weight Reduction and Its Risks

September 4, 2007
Written By John Allen Mollenhauer

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Posted By Joel Fuhrman
From Disease-Proof

According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), wound problems and complications from blood clots are common aftereffects of gastric bypass and gastroplasty surgery. The NIH has also reported that those undergoing surgical treatment for obesity have had substantial nutritional and metabolic complications, gastritis, esophagitis, outlet stenosis, and abdominal hernias. More than 10 percent required another operation to fix problems resulting from the first surgery.1

 

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