4.4 Article

Change in Mineral Status After Bariatric Surgery: a Meta-analysis

Journal

OBESITY SURGERY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11695-023-06888-6

Keywords

Bariatric surgery; Mineral; Meta-analysis; Obesity

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After bariatric surgery, the most common mineral deficiencies are iron, zinc, copper, chlorine, phosphorus, and calcium, while serum concentrations of potassium, sodium, selenium, manganese, and molybdenum do not show significant changes before and after surgery. Differences in surgical procedures, study regions, and follow-up time may impact the postoperative mineral status.
Background: The risk of protein and vitamin deficiencies after bariatric surgery has been well studied, but the change in mineral status has not gotten enough attention. This study aimed to perform a meta-analysis regarding the change in mineral levels after bariatric surgery and the prevalence of postoperative mineral deficiency, with subgroup analyses of different surgical procedures, study regions, and follow-up time.Methods: CENTRAL, PubMed, and EMBASE were searched for related articles. Meta-analysis, subgroup analysis, and sensitivity analysis were performed if necessary.Results: A total of 107 articles with 47,432 patients were included. The most severe mineral deficiency after bariatric surgery was iron (20.1%), followed by zinc (18.3%), copper (14.4%), chlorine (12.2%), phosphorus (7.5%), and calcium (7.4%). Serum concentrations of potassium, sodium, selenium, manganese, and molybdenum showed no significant change before and after surgery. Subgroup analyses revealed that SG had fewer deficiencies in serum iron, calcium, zinc, magnesium, phosphorus, copper, and selenium than RYGB. OAGB showed a higher incidence of serum iron and zinc deficiencies than RYGB. Studies conducted in different regions also found various mineral statuses after surgery. Studies with follow-up >= 5 years had a lower prevalence of zinc, copper, and selenium deficiencies than follow-up < 5 years.Conclusion: A high deficiency rate of serum iron, zinc, copper, chlorine, phosphorus, and calcium was seen after bariatric surgery. The difference in surgical procedures, study regions, and follow-up time may affect postoperative mineral status; more targeted mineral supplement programs are needed considering these influencing factors.

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