What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults

Bariatric surgery has become an accepted method to treat obesity and its related diseases in adults; nevertheless, few bariatric surgery follow-up studies compare changes in body mass index (BMI), disease outcomes, and side effects among age groups. This study compares bariatric surgery outcomes acr...

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Main Authors: Cindy L. Marihart PhD, Ardith R. Brunt PhD, Samuel A. Marihart BA, Angela A. Geraci PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-01-01
Series:Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721415621812
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spelling doaj-602a8813507c4ced8ff8a63c958e18262020-11-25T02:48:08ZengSAGE PublishingGerontology and Geriatric Medicine2333-72142016-01-01210.1177/233372141562181210.1177_2333721415621812What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest AdultsCindy L. Marihart PhD0Ardith R. Brunt PhD1Samuel A. Marihart BA2Angela A. Geraci PhD3North Dakota State University, Fargo, USANorth Dakota State University, Fargo, USANorth Dakota State University, Fargo, USANorth Dakota State University, Fargo, USABariatric surgery has become an accepted method to treat obesity and its related diseases in adults; nevertheless, few bariatric surgery follow-up studies compare changes in body mass index (BMI), disease outcomes, and side effects among age groups. This study compares bariatric surgery outcomes across four adult age groups by comparing changes in milestone BMIs such as highest and lowest BMI, perceived existing disease outcomes, and symptoms related to those diseases. Data were obtained using a 40-item questionnaire that was mailed to 2,520 patients of a Midwestern weight management center who were at least 18 months post-bariatric surgical procedure. The 534 respondents were divided into four age groups in years: 18 to 49 ( n = 171), 50-59 ( n = 148), 60-69 ( n = 138), and ≥ 70 ( n = 77). There were no differences among the age groups for lowest ( p = .93) and current BMI ( p = .51). Significant improvement in eight chronic diseases occurred across all age groups. There were no differences between age groups in reported occurrence of incontinence ( p = .65), diarrhea ( p = .22), flatulence ( p = .46), heartburn ( p = .73), and indigestion ( p = .22). Constipation rarely occurred among the oldest adults ( p < .001). Bariatric surgery should be considered an option for weight loss and disease management for older adults as much as it is for younger adults.https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721415621812
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cindy L. Marihart PhD
Ardith R. Brunt PhD
Samuel A. Marihart BA
Angela A. Geraci PhD
spellingShingle Cindy L. Marihart PhD
Ardith R. Brunt PhD
Samuel A. Marihart BA
Angela A. Geraci PhD
What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
author_facet Cindy L. Marihart PhD
Ardith R. Brunt PhD
Samuel A. Marihart BA
Angela A. Geraci PhD
author_sort Cindy L. Marihart PhD
title What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
title_short What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
title_full What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
title_fullStr What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
title_full_unstemmed What’s Age Got to Do With It? A Comparison of Bariatric Surgical Outcomes Among Young, Midlife, Older and Oldest Adults
title_sort what’s age got to do with it? a comparison of bariatric surgical outcomes among young, midlife, older and oldest adults
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
issn 2333-7214
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Bariatric surgery has become an accepted method to treat obesity and its related diseases in adults; nevertheless, few bariatric surgery follow-up studies compare changes in body mass index (BMI), disease outcomes, and side effects among age groups. This study compares bariatric surgery outcomes across four adult age groups by comparing changes in milestone BMIs such as highest and lowest BMI, perceived existing disease outcomes, and symptoms related to those diseases. Data were obtained using a 40-item questionnaire that was mailed to 2,520 patients of a Midwestern weight management center who were at least 18 months post-bariatric surgical procedure. The 534 respondents were divided into four age groups in years: 18 to 49 ( n = 171), 50-59 ( n = 148), 60-69 ( n = 138), and ≥ 70 ( n = 77). There were no differences among the age groups for lowest ( p = .93) and current BMI ( p = .51). Significant improvement in eight chronic diseases occurred across all age groups. There were no differences between age groups in reported occurrence of incontinence ( p = .65), diarrhea ( p = .22), flatulence ( p = .46), heartburn ( p = .73), and indigestion ( p = .22). Constipation rarely occurred among the oldest adults ( p < .001). Bariatric surgery should be considered an option for weight loss and disease management for older adults as much as it is for younger adults.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721415621812
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