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Sökning: WFRF:(Wirén Mikael 1950 )

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1.
  • Laurenius, Anna, et al. (författare)
  • Nordiska riktlinjer för kosttillskott och uppföljning efter obesitaskirurgi - Monitorering och supplementering med vitaminer och mineraler
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Läkartidningen. - 0023-7205 .- 1652-7518. ; 115
  • Forskningsöversikt (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Each year 6,800 bariatric operations are performed in Sweden. Bariatric surgery involves both a reduced intake and a reduced absorption of vitamins and minerals. There has been debate about whose responsibility long-term follow-up is, particularly regarding monitoring vitamin and mineral status. The Swedish Society for Bariatric Surgery and the Norwegian Association for Bariatric Surgery, who oversee their respective national quality registers, have appointed an expert group to develop guidelines for postoperative supplementation and nutritional monitoring of vitamins and minerals, along with a schedule for routine follow-up. Several existing international guidelines have served as the basis for the development of this guidance. The Finnish Association for Metabolic Surgery and The Danish Association for the Study of Obesity have also decided to adopt the recommendations. The care of the patient group with severe obesity is a common responsibility of primary care and hospitals, as patients are heavily affected by obesity-related morbidity, which, even without surgery, requires major health care efforts, not least from primary care. After surgery, a large proportion of these efforts can be reduced, but focus changes.
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2.
  • Paul, Rebecca, 1978- (författare)
  • Obesity and Effects of Bariatric Surgery - with a Certain Focus on Women's Health
  • 2023
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Severe obesity influences sex hormone levels in women, which may result in subfertility, menstrual disturbances, anovulation and hyperandrogenism as well as increased risk for complications during pregnancy and birthing. Bariatric surgery leads to long-term weight loss and resolution of several comorbidities including hormone imbalance. However, the impact of altered sex hormones in women with obesity is insufficiently understood. Little is known concerning potential influences of changed sex hormone levels on women's function and quality of life following bariatric surgery and subsequent weight loss.    This thesis aims to understand sex hormone balance in women with severe obesity and after bariatric surgery and to explore women’s experiences of changes in life after bariatric surgery and weight loss.  Study I included 100 women and utilized blood assay to investigate changes in serum sex- hormone levels and questionnaires concerning sexual function and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in women with severe obesity before and one year after bariatric surgery. Findings from Study I indicated that testosterone and sex hormone binding globulin normalized, and questionnaires showed improvements in several domains of sexual function, psychological well-being and general health in women one year after surgery.  Study II used a qualitative method, specifically thematic analysis, to explore women's pre- and postoperative experiences, indicating that increased fertility and achieved motherhood were motivating factors to undergo bariatric surgery. Fourteen women were interviewed, and the themes of “Experiencing Motherhood and Femininity” and “Achieving a Normal Life” emerged from the data.  Study III applied the qualitative method with Gadamer’s hermeneutic analysis to understand the lived experiences of premenopausal women with obesity before and after having undergone bariatric surgery. A focus was on influences of altered sex hormones and potential restoration of levels after surgery. Ten women were included, and analysis of the horizons created the fusions of “Recognition of Unhealthy Body Weight”, “Dealing with Other People’s Opinions and Society’s Norms”, “Life has Changed in a Positive Way” and “Accepting Inner Self and Bodily Changes”.  Finally, to elaborate on previous studies' findings and better understand the current knowledge base, a systematic review and interpretative meta-synthesis of published literature involving qualitative methods concerning women’s experiences of womanliness related to changes after undergoing bariatric surgery was conducted in study IV. Ten relevant studies were included, and a meta-synthesis, according to Gadamer’s hermeneutics, created the fusions of “Womanliness,” “A Healthy and Functioning Body,” and “Mind and Body Connection.”  This thesis provides a clearer understanding of the experiences of living with obesity that motivate premenopausal women to seek bariatric surgery. The importance of postoperative benefits such as restored function, health and womanliness are illustrated as well as clarifying difficulties involving adaptations to life after surgery. These findings may inform potential bariatric surgery candidates and healthcare professionals of the experiences of women living with obesity, as well as expectations,  postoperative experiences and challenges. These findings promote patient-centred guidance prior to surgery and during postoperative follow-up. 
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