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Endocrine implications of bariatric surgery: a review on the intersection between incretins, bone, and sex hormones.

Citation
Casimiro, I., et al. “Endocrine Implications Of Bariatric Surgery: A Review On The Intersection Between Incretins, Bone, And Sex Hormones.”. Physiological Reports, p. e14111.
Center University of Chicago
Author Isabel Casimiro, Susan Sam, Matthew J Brady
Keywords Bariatric surgery, GLP-1, Incretins, obesity
Abstract

Bariatric surgery is now the most widely used intervention for the treatment of human obesity. A large body of literature has demonstrated its efficacy in sustained weight loss and improvement in its associated comorbidities. Here, we review the effect of bariatric surgery in gut hormone physiology, bone remodeling and the reproductive axis. Rapid improvements in insulin release and sensitivity appear to be weight loss independent and occur immediately after surgery. These effects on pancreatic beta cells are mostly due to increased gut hormone secretion due to augmented nutrient delivery to the small intestine. Bone remodeling is also affected by gut hormones. Phenotypic skeletal changes observed in mice deficient in GLP-1 or GIP suggest that increased incretins may improve bone density. However, these positive effects may be counterbalanced by the association between weight loss and a reduction in bone density. Finally, studies have shown a marked improvement following bariatric surgery in infertility and PCOS in women and hypogonadism in men. Thus, the net effect on endocrine systems after bariatric surgery will likely vary on an individual basis and depend on factors such as comorbidities, peri-menopausal state, amount of weight loss, and likelihood to adhere to vitamin supplementation after surgery.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Physiological reports
Volume
7
Issue
10
Number of Pages
e14111
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2051-817X
DOI
10.14814/phy2.14111
Alternate Journal
Physiol Rep
PMID
31134746
PMCID
PMC6536581
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