Diagnostics (Oct 2022)

Common, Less Common, and Unexpected Complications after Bariatric Surgery: A Pictorial Essay

  • Francesca Iacobellis,
  • Giuseppina Dell’Aversano Orabona,
  • Antonio Brillantino,
  • Marco Di Serafino,
  • Alessandro Rengo,
  • Paola Crivelli,
  • Luigia Romano,
  • Mariano Scaglione

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12112637
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 2637

Abstract

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Bariatric surgery has demonstrated a higher rate of success than other nonsurgical treatments in selected patients with obesity; however, like all medical procedures, postoperative complications may occur, ranging between 2 and 10% and, although rare, they can be life threatening. Complications may be unspecific (any surgery-related complications) or specific (linked to the specific surgical procedure) and can be distinguished as common, less common, and unexpected. According to the onset, they may be acute, when occurring in the first 30 days after surgery, or chronic, with a presentation after 30 days from the procedure. The aim of this pictorial essay is to review the radiological aspects of surgical techniques usually performed and the possible complications, in order to make radiologists more confident with the postsurgical anatomy and with the normal and abnormal imaging findings.

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