• Obesity surgery · Oct 2005

    Utilization of intensive care resources in bariatric surgery.

    • Juan Carlos Cendán, Dolan Abu-aouf, Andrea Gabrielli, Lawrence J Caruso, William Robert Rout, Michael P Hocking, and A Joseph Layon.
    • Department of Surgery, Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USA.
    • Obes Surg. 2005 Oct 1; 15 (9): 1247-51.

    BackgroundObese patients occasionally require either elective or emergency critical care services following bariatric surgery. We describe this subgroup of patients.MethodsFrom July 1, 1991 to July 31, 2004, we performed 1,279 bariatric operations; 241 (19%) required admission to the surgical critical care service. We retrospectively reviewed medical records for gender, body mass index (BMI), age, whether the operation was initial or revisional, and whether critical care admission was elective or emergent. 3 complication clusters (thromboembolic, pulmonary, and anastomotic) were identified using discharge ICD-9 codes. The costs and length of stay of these subpopulations was calculated.ResultsPatients were on average 46+/-10 years old, with BMI 59+/-13. Critical care admission was emergent in 52.7% (n=127) of cases. Revisional cases did not differ from the initial cases in BMI (56.4 vs 59.2, P=0.42) and they were no more likely to require emergent critical care admission than initial cases (P=0.16). Revisional cases were hospitalized longer (27.2+/-25.6 vs 12.5+/-18.7 days, P=0.003); had higher total hospital costs (US$ 60,631+/-78,337 vs 27,697+/-52,351, P=0.025); and were more likely to die from their complications (revisional surgery mortality 6.5% vs 1.9% for initial surgery [P=0.002]).ConclusionsAn increasing number of surgical revisions will likely accompany the recent increase in popularity of bariatric surgery. In our experience, these patients require significant critical care services, and have longer, complicated, and more costly hospitalizations.

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