Chicago [US]: The first study to demonstrate long-term alcohol consumption and associated problems in this cohort found that youth who underwent metabolic and bariatric surgery as teenagers are more likely to drink alcohol. After eight years, researchers discovered that over half of the study participants had alcohol use disorders, signs of alcohol-related damage, or issues. Results were released in the Annals of Surgery publication.
"The increased alcohol use we found in this study surpasses that expected from others in this age group in the general population," said study author and principal investigator Thomas Inge, MD, PhD, Surgeon-in-Chief and Director of Adolescent Bariatric Surgery Program at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, as well as Professor of Surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "We also know the anatomic changes after surgery result in increased sensitivity to alcohol, so that ounce for ounce, greater effects and consequences of alcohol intake are seen after these operations."