Cambio en el patrón de consumo de sustancias posterior a cirugía bariátrica: presentación de un caso clínico.

Autores/as

  • Yamil Quevedo Instituto Schilkrut
  • Kurt Kirsten Universidad de Chile
  • Consuelo Ponce de León Universidad de Los Andes
  • Alejandro Fernández Instituto Schilkrut

Palabras clave:

Alcoholism, Bariatric surgery, Substance-related disorders

Resumen

Even though the benefits of bariatric surgery are supported by scientific evidence, its indications and contraindications must be revised to avoid its indiscriminate use. Substance use is more common in patients subjected to bariatric surgery than in the general population. After surgery, an increase in alcohol abuse has been reported. We report a 41 years old male, with morbid obesity, alcohol and cocaine use. After bariatric surgery, his alcohol tolerance significantly decreased, increasing the doses of cocaine and starting to consume it without alcohol. His high anxiety level and paranoid delusions, motivated him to seek help in a rehabilitation center where a Substance Dependence Disorder was diagnosed and received initial treatment. The cause of this adverse effect needs further research. Functional and anatomic changes in the digestive tract lead to a greater alcohol absorption and reduced alcohol dehydrogenase activity. Also neurochemical alterations may produce a displacement from compulsive use of food to compulsive use of addictive substances.

Biografía del autor/a

Yamil Quevedo, Instituto Schilkrut

Psiquiatra

Kurt Kirsten, Universidad de Chile

Becado de Psiquiatría

Consuelo Ponce de León, Universidad de Los Andes

Becado de Psiquiatría

Alejandro Fernández, Instituto Schilkrut

Psiquiatra

Descargas

Publicado

2014-12-16

Cómo citar

Quevedo, Y., Kirsten, K., Ponce de León, C., & Fernández, A. (2014). Cambio en el patrón de consumo de sustancias posterior a cirugía bariátrica: presentación de un caso clínico. Revista Médica De Chile, 143(1). Recuperado a partir de https://mail.revistamedicadechile.cl/index.php/rmedica/article/view/3478

Número

Sección

Reporte de Caso Clínico

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