Procedure overview
What Is Revisional Bariatric Surgery?
A bariatric revision is performed when the original weight loss surgery is no longer doing what the patient needs it to do. Some patients come to us because they have regained weight after years of holding their results. Others have developed reflux that medication can't manage, or a stricture that limits eating, or a complication from an older procedure (most commonly a Lap-Band) that needs to be addressed. Revision is a clinical decision, not a corrective for the patient's behavior.
How a revision differs from a primary bariatric surgery
While a primary bariatric procedure works on previously untouched anatomy, a revision works on anatomy that has already been altered by surgery. The tissue is scarred, the landmarks are different, and the technical approach has to account for whatever was done the first time. Revisions are often more complex than the original procedure and take longer in the operating room — typically 120 to 180 minutes for a sleeve-to-bypass conversion compared with 60 to 90 minutes for a primary sleeve gastrectomy.
The most common types of revision we perform
The revisions we perform most often are sleeve-to-bypass conversion, Lap-Band removal (with or without same-session conversion to a current procedure), conversion to SADI-S for selected patients, and endoscopic non-surgical revisions for patients who don't need or don't qualify for a second operation. Each addresses a different clinical scenario, and Dr. Patel will recommend the right path after reviewing your records from the original surgery and your current clinical picture.
