January 18, 2022

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You might need to delay your pregnancy if you're having bariatric surgery

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Women who undergo bariatric surgery should be managed in the perinatal period with a multidisciplinary team to improve pregnancy-related outcomes, according to the authors of a narrative review published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Obesity increases the risk of infertility for men and women and decreases the effectiveness of fertility therapies, wrote the authors, led by Dr. Sarah Cheah from the St George Hospital in Sydney. Obesity also increases the risks of fetal morbidity and mortality and maternal pregnancy complications as well as the likelihood of complex delivery.

"Bariatric generally leads to more than 20 percent of total body weight loss, which is sufficient to ameliorate , diabetes and hypertension," Cheah and colleagues wrote. "It has been shown to improve fertility and pregnancy-related outcomes for mother and child.

"However, in the absence of well constructed trials, for fertility reasons has to be prescribed on a case-by-case basis. Almost 60 percent of who have bariatric surgery are within the age range of 20–44 years, and these women need appropriate advice and management around contraception, peri-conception nutrition and supplementation, and weight management during and after pregnancy."

Cheah and colleagues made the following recommendations after a review of the available evidence:

"Post-bariatric surgery are at increased risk of nutritional insufficiencies during their pregnancy and of preterm or small for gestational age fetuses," Cheah and colleagues concluded.

"It is important that these are managed early on in the prenatal period with a multidisciplinary team beyond the traditional obstetricians and maternity specialists to also involve bariatric surgeons, bariatric medical practitioners, bariatric dieticians and the patient's usual GP to improve -related outcomes."

More information: Sarah Cheah et al, Fertility, pregnancy and post partum management after bariatric surgery: a narrative review, Medical Journal of Australia (2022). DOI: 10.5694/mja2.51373

Journal information: Medical Journal of Australia

Provided by Medical Journal of Australia

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