Effect on Body Composition of a Meal-Replacement Progression Diet in Patients 1 Month after Bariatric Surgery

Author:

López-Gómez Juan J.12ORCID,Ramos-Bachiller Beatriz12,Primo-Martín David12,Calleja-Fernández Alicia2ORCID,Izaola-Jauregui Olatz12,Jiménez-Sahagún Rebeca12,González-Gutiérrez Jaime12,López Andrés Eva12,Pinto-Fuentes Pilar3,Pacheco-Sánchez David3ORCID,De Luis-Román Daniel A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Endocrinology and Nutrition Department, Clinic Universitary Hospital of Valladolid, 47003 Valladolid, Spain

2. Investigation Centre Endocrinology and Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine, University of Valladolid, 47003 Valladolid, Spain

3. General Surgery Department, Rio Hortega Universitary Hospital, 47012 Valladolid, Spain

Abstract

Background: Progression diets after bariatric surgery (BS) are restricted in calories and protein, and they may induce a worsening of body composition. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a modified diet with an oral nutritional supplement that is hyperproteic and normocaloric over the body composition. Methods: A two-arm ambispective observational cohort study was designed. Forty-four patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy were included in the study. Thirty patients received a progression diet with a normocaloric, hyperproteic oral nutritional supplement during the first two weeks after surgery (820 kcal, 65.5 g protein). They were compared with a historical cohort of 14 patients treated with a standard progression diet (220 kcal, 11.5 g protein). Anthropometric and body composition (using electrical bioimpedanciometry) data were analyzed before BS and 1 month after the surgery. Results: The mean age was 47.35(10.22) years; 75% were women, and the average presurgical body mass index (BMI) was 45.98(6.13) kg/m2, with no differences between both arms of intervention. One month after surgery, no differences in the percentage of excess weight loss (%PEWL) were observed between patients in the high-protein-diet group (HP) and low-protein-diet group (LP) (HP: 21.86 (12.60)%; LP: 18.10 (13.49)%; p = 0.38). A lower loss of appendicular skeletal muscle mass index was observed in the HP (HP: −5.70 (8.79)%; LP: −10.54 (6.29)%; p < 0.05) and fat-free mass index (HP: 3.86 (8.50)%; LP:−9.44 (5.75)%; p = 0.03), while a higher loss of fat mass was observed in the HP (HP: −14.22 (10.09)%; LP: −5.26 (11.08)%; p < 0.01). Conclusions: In patients undergoing gastric sleeve surgery, the addition of a normocaloric, hyperproteic formula managed to slow down the loss of muscle mass and increase the loss of fat mass with no differences on total weight loss.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference35 articles.

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