Procedure overview
What Is Gastric Bypass Surgery?
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass is a permanent weight loss surgery that changes both the size of the stomach and the route food takes through the digestive system. During the procedure, the upper stomach is divided into a small pouch about the size of an egg, and a section of the small intestine is brought up and connected directly to that pouch. Food then bypasses most of the original stomach and the first portion of the small intestine, which reduces both intake and absorption.
How Roux-en-Y reroutes digestion
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass assists weight loss in two ways. First, the new stomach pouch holds only about one ounce of food at a time, which limits portion size for the rest of the patient's life. Second, the rerouted intestine reduces calorie and nutrient absorption because food skips the part of the small intestine where most absorption happens. Patients also experience hormonal changes after surgery — the rerouting alters levels of ghrelin and GLP-1, which together reduce appetite and improve blood sugar regulation almost immediately, often before significant weight loss has occurred.
While the digestive system is rearranged, food still moves through the body and is absorbed by the lower small intestine. The small pouch and the bypassed segment are designed to work together for the patient's lifetime, with lifelong vitamin and mineral supplementation to make up for the reduced absorption.
Why we offer laparoscopic and robotic approaches
Our bariatric surgery program performs gastric bypass using two surgical techniques: laparoscopy, and with robotic assistance using the da Vinci system.
Laparoscopic
Laparoscopic surgery uses four to six small incisions and a camera to guide the procedure.
Robotic-assisted (da Vinci)
Robotic-assisted surgery gives Dr. Chetan Patel a magnified three-dimensional view and finer instrument movement, which helps in the tight working space required for the Roux-en-Y anastomosis (the connection between the new pouch and the small intestine).
For most patients, both approaches produce equivalent outcomes, and Dr. Patel will recommend the one best suited to your anatomy and prior surgical history.
