Bariatric surgery induced significant reductions in body weight, fat mass, and fat-free mass, and improved many physical fitness and health indicators in individuals with obesity.
Systematic Review (n=7,105)
Does bariatric surgery improve physical performance, metabolic, and health indices in adults with obesity?
Bariatric surgery significantly improves body composition, physical performance, and metabolic indices in adults with obesity, though it also leads to a decrease in fat-free mass.
This systematic review summarizes current evidence on the impact of bariatric surgery (BS) on physical performance, metabolic, and health indices in adults with obesity. This systematic review suggests that BS induced significant reductions in body weight, fat mass, and fat-free mass in individuals with obesity. Additionally, BS may improve many physical fitness and health indicators. Observed improvements manifest during a distinct period of time. To date, studies on BS and performance have been small in number, nonrandomized in design, and not controlled regarding gender distribution and/or post-surgery follow-up. Future studies should further investigate concerns associated with understanding of BS outcomes to improve these outcomes with potential benefits for quality of life, disability, mortality, morbidity, and overall BS success.
Jabbour et al. (Sun,) conducted a systematic review in Severe obesity (n=7,105). Bariatric surgery vs. Pre-surgery baseline was evaluated on Body composition changes and weight loss. Bariatric surgery induced significant reductions in body weight, fat mass, and fat-free mass, and improved many physical fitness and health indicators in individuals with obesity.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: