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Asians develop type-2 diabetes at a lower BMI because of their genetic propensity to have more visceral fat for their BMI range.
It is no longer believed now that the reversal of diabetes after metabolic surgery is due primarily to weight loss and there is
now much data showing that diabetes reverses quite quickly after surgery before much weight loss has occurred. Clearly hormonal
mechanisms are at play, some of which have been worked out and others remain to be discovered. It is also no longer in doubt that
bypass operations have a stronger anti-diabetic effect although a sleeve resection does an adequate job in the obese and overweight
patient. In this small series of 60 patients, we document the results of an unselected group of low BMI patients operated mainly with
the goal of improving or reversing their type-2 diabetes. We define full reversal as those who get off all medications including insulin
and are able to document HbA1C result of 6.5% or below. We collected 60 patients of average age 50.3 years (Range 33-64 years).
There were 34 males and 26 females. Duration of diabetes averaged 8.3 years. 22 were on insulin and 38 were only on oral medication.
Average blood sugar before surgery was 9.5mmole/l. Average weight of patients before surgery was 78.59 Kg (Range 51.5 Kg to 126.7
Kg). BMI before surgery was 28.99 Kg/square meter. (Range (18.7 to 37.66). 18 patients had BMI 27 or under and only 4 patients had
BMI more than 35 Kg/square meter. Pre-operative C-peptide level was 2.4 UG/L (Range 0.75 to 4.5). All patients who were obese with
BMI around 27 or above had a laparoscopic gastric sleeve resection. Those under BMI of 27 had a Roux-en-Y gastric by-pass or Miniby-
pass. The bypass was modified to minimize the weight loss effect of the operation. Average blood sugar before the surgery was 9.57
(mmole/l), this dropped to 6.03mmole/l after this operation. The difference was 3.28 mmole/l. After an average of 18 months follow
up, (90%) were off-all medication, 6 patients (10%) were still on oral medication but were off insulin. Patients who were previously
only on oral medication were all off diabetic medication. Of the 6 patients who are still on medication 4 are in the below BMI 27 kg/
square meter group. This gives a success rate in this very low BMI group of 77%. Success rate in the above BMI 27 group was 95%
(40 of 42 patients). Average HbA1C before surgery was 8.02%. All of these were despite medication or insulin. Average HbA1C after
surgery was 5.9% (Range 4.9 to 6.8%). The average drop in HbA1c was 2.9%. Average weight of patient after the surgery was 62.27kg
(Range 46.7 kg to 91.5kg). Average weight loss was 12.5kg (Range 6.3kg to 22.1kg). No patient became excessively underweight after
the surgery. We strongly believe that the effect of metabolic surgery on type-2 diabetes is independent of start weight or weight loss
and that BMI should no longer be considered in evaluating patients for metabolic surgery. There should not be any fixed lower BMI
for doing this surgery.