Procedure overview
What Is SADI-S Surgery?
SADI-S is a relatively newer bariatric procedure that builds on the older biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS). The key change is that SADI-S uses a single intestinal connection (anastomosis) instead of the two connections required by BPD-DS, which makes the operation shorter and reduces certain complication risks while preserving most of the metabolic benefit. The procedure combines a sleeve gastrectomy with this single intestinal bypass, and the result is both restriction (the small sleeved stomach) and significant malabsorption (the bypassed segment of small intestine).
How SADI-S combines a sleeve and a duodenal switch
SADI-S assists weight loss in two ways. First, the sleeve gastrectomy component removes 75 to 85 percent of the stomach, leaving a narrow sleeve that limits how much food a patient can eat at one time. Second, the single intestinal bypass — the duodenum is divided just below the stomach and connected to a downstream loop of the small intestine — significantly reduces calorie and nutrient absorption. The duodenal-ileal connection is the single anastomosis the procedure is named for.
The hormonal effects of SADI-S are stronger than sleeve gastrectomy alone because the intestinal bypass alters GLP-1 and other gut hormone levels in addition to the ghrelin reduction from the sleeve. The metabolic effect is one of the reasons SADI-S has stronger published Type 2 diabetes remission rates than other primary bariatric procedures.
Why we offer laparoscopic and robotic SADI-S
Our bariatric surgery program performs SADI-S 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)
The duodenal-ileal connection sits deep in the abdomen and is technically demanding to construct, which is one reason Dr. Chetan Patel often uses the robotic approach for SADI-S — the magnified three-dimensional view and finer instrument movement help in the tight working space.
For most patients, both approaches produce equivalent outcomes.
