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Contour deformities after post–bariatric surgery weight loss are varied and often complex. The Pittsburgh Rating Scale is a useful classification system that allows grading of 10 areas of the body following massive weight loss. Each area is scored on a scale of 0 to 3 and considered as part of the overall picture. Mild abdominal deformities call for standard measures, and increasing levels of deformity require more complex surgery and modifications to achieve adequate correction.
The grades of abdominal deformity are shown in Fig. 32.1 .
There has been an exponential increase in obese and overweight patients throughout the world, with rates in Europe and North America estimated to be approximately 20% to 30% of the adult population. One of the few means to achieve significant and maintained weight loss consistently is bariatric surgery. Evidence has shown that this brings a reduction in health-related complications, such as diabetes, psychosocial functioning, personal health perceptions, and health-related quality of life.
An inevitable consequence of significant weight loss is the persistence of large quantities of excess and inelastic skin and subcutaneous tissue. Body contouring surgery involves many areas and even more techniques. The best results are obtained by tailoring surgery to create individual packages for each patient. The abdomen is normally the first priority. Depending on the deformity, it can be treated in isolation or with a circumferential technique to address the buttocks and back.
After massive weight loss, large areas of redundant skin and fat cause significant distress to patients. They often experience skin irritation, mycotic infection, and secondary self-image problems. The excess skin also affects activities of daily living and often leaves patients more embarrassed and self-conscious than the obesity itself.
It is essential to ensure that patients are optimized before surgery and, in many cases, it is appropriate to liaise with their bariatric team. They need to have achieved weight stability for at least 1 year. A body mass index (BMI) of 30 or less is optimal. Folate, vitamin B 12 , and iron deficiencies must all be corrected. Patients need to be counseled that multiple, often staged procedures may be necessary to meet their goals, and their expectations have to be realistic. Each stage encompasses further risk, recovery time, and often expense.
The key deciding factors used in choosing the abdominoplasty technique are as follows:
The amount of abdominal laxity
Patient preference regarding the extent and location of scars
Risk factors, such as previous abdominal incisions (e.g., Kocher's incision) and keloid or hypertrophic scar
Resistant fat pads—their quantity and location
The traditional abdominoplasty involves elevation of skin to the xiphisternum and costal margin laterally. The skin is then pulled taught by flexing the patient at the waist to reduce the tension, and a new opening is created for the umbilicus. This technique has several limitations, which restricts its use.
Large areas of undermining limit the blood supply to the skin and divide the retaining ligaments. This opens a large cavity with the potential for seroma and hematoma formation, both of which have a higher incidence in weight loss patients. Tensing the skin and dividing the retaining ligaments to enable closure gives a barrel-shaped abdomen, with loss of the definition of the rectus muscle and waist. The undermining inevitably compromises blood supply and prevents liposuction in zones 1 and 2.
Most weight loss patients will retain significant fat pads and laxity under the inframammary fold (IMF). Given the degree of skin laxity in these patients, most patents will have significant dog-ears laterally, which need a second stage for removal. In addition, the vertical laxity cannot be addressed.
This technique does not usually allow for tightening of the skin in the vertical dimension.
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