Published online Nov 27, 2020. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v12.i11.1004
Peer-review started: June 30, 2020
First decision: August 8, 2020
Revised: August 24, 2020
Accepted: October 12, 2020
Article in press: October 12, 2020
Published online: November 27, 2020
Processing time: 146 Days and 19 Hours
Obesity is a complex chronic inflammatory disease characterized by excessive accumulation of body fat. In obese people, a common comorbidity is non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD is considered the most common liver disease in Western countries, affecting 90% of morbidly obese patients eligible for bariatric surgery. To evaluate this patients, bioimpedance (BIA) can be a good method for nutritional and prognostic evaluation, using phase angle (PA).
There are not enough studies to evaluate morbid obesity, its body composition (described by the BIA), and associated comorbidities, such as NAFLD. We believe that the body change resulting from bariatric surgery will reflect an improvement in NAFLD and can be measured by PA, since it reflects cellular integrity and functionality by measuring, through an electrical current, the values of resistance and reactance of the membrane of these cells, with skeletal muscle being a conductor of electrical current and the opposite occurring with fat mass.
The aim of this study was to analyze the behavior of PA in the postoperative period of bariatric surgery, correlating it with changes in body composition and improvement of liver disease.
This was a retrospective cohort study that analyzed the medical records of 727 patients undergoing bariatric surgery in a referral center of a teaching hospital in the south of Brazil. For convenience, the sample was carried out from July 2015 to July 2017. The data obtained were related to the protocol for routine pre- and postoperative care at the service's outpatient clinic. Quantitative and categorical variables analyses were performed to assess the association between PA, NAFLD, and body composition before and after bariatric surgery.
We analyzed 727 patients’ medical records, and 379 patients were selected for having all preoperative data. Regarding PA, 169 patients were analyzed, and 33 patients had liver biopsy pre-and postoperatively with NAFLD information. The PA showed a significant reduction in the postoperative period as well as body composition data. Regarding liver disease, all patients presented a reduction in the degrees and stages of liver disease in the postoperative period, and some had no degree of liver disease.
The PA decreased after bariatric surgery, with a direct correlation with weight loss and changes in body composition, and it did not correlate with the improvement of NAFLD. With the data presented in this study, we suggest that PA may be a marker of the state of body composition linked to the functionality of skeletal muscle mass.
Performing large scale prospective studies with long-term follow-up are needed to verify if PA increases with more time after bariatric surgery, since the change in the body composition of the operated patient will reflect an improvement in body mass distribution and, consequently, less inflammatory process.