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  Vol. 117 No. 1, JANUARY 1966 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Effects of Jejunocolic Shunt on Obesity, Serum Lipoproteins, Lipids, and Electrolytes

LENA A. LEWIS, PhD; RUPERT B. TURNBULL, JR., MD; IRVINE H. PAGE, MD

Arch Intern Med. 1966;117(1):4-16.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

IN OBESE PATIENTS who have undergone jejunocolic shunt, there is decreased intestinal absorption, especially of fats, associated with reduced levels of serum cholesterol and of β-lipoproteins. The decrease in serum lipids has persisted for as long as six years after operation and five years after the weight of the patient has become stabilized near normal.

Materials and Methods

Eleven grotesquely fat patients, whose obesity was due to excessive caloric intake, and who had been unable to reduce, were selected for surgical treatment.

Surgical Technique.

—The difficult task of anesthetizing the patients was first undertaken.* The force required for ventilation in an extremely obese patient is much greater in the supine position than the upright. Because of this difficulty cyclopropane was administered by a large cuffed endotracheal tube; d-tubocurarine was used as a muscle relaxant, especially to facilitate positive-pressure breathing. The abdomen was opened through a high right paramedian incision. The . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

CLEVELAND

From the Research Division (Drs. Lewis and Page) and the Department of General Surgery (Dr. Turnbull), the Cleveland Clinic Foundation.


Footnotes

Received for publication Sept 29, 1965; accepted Nov 10.

Reprint requests to Cleveland Clinic, 2020 E 93rd St, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (Dr. Page).



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