A toddler in Saudi Arabia has become the youngest patient to undergo a bariatric weight loss surgery procedure.


Doctors determined the 2-year-old, weighing 73 pounds, required surgery after observing related sleep apnea and bowing of the child's legs. According to a case report published in the International Journal of Surgery[1] earlier this month, the extreme procedure was taken only after other weight-loss methods failed.


BEFORE:

obese boy


The study authors note that "full compliance" to diet and exercise by the boy's parents cannot be verified, citing "different socio cultural habits and the absence of the practice of calculating the calorific value of the diet."


The laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy[2] (LSG) was carried out in 2010 at the Prince Sultan Military Medical City in Riyadh. Unlike a "lap band," which can be removed[3] , LSG involves actually cutting and re-sizing the stomach itself, then stapling it shut.


Paul Zimmett, an obesity expert contacted by News Corp Australia[4] , called the case "shocking" and "very unusual."


"We have no idea what effect this may have on the child's growth and unless he has proper follow up he may suffer vitamin deficiencies," he added.


Within two months of the surgery, doctors reported a 15 percent decrease in the boy's weight. After 24 months, the boy had reportedly lost 27 percent of his weight and was back to about 50 pounds.


In the United States, childhood obesity rates have doubled in the last 30 years[5] , according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Childhood obesity is linked to increased incidents of cardiovascular disease, prediabetes[6] and a slew of other physical and psychological ailments.


AFTER:

obese boy after



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