👉 Trusted Guide for Bariatric Surgery in Mexico · Updated 2026Free Evaluation

Complex Cases

Bariatric Revision Surgery in Mexico

Revision surgery is significantly more complex than a first-time bariatric procedure. Altered anatomy, scar tissue, weight regain, and reflux all require an experienced surgeon and careful evaluation.

Why Revision

Six Common Reasons Patients Need Revision

Weight Regain

Significant weight regained 2–5+ years after initial surgery despite efforts.

Failed Sleeve

Inadequate weight loss after gastric sleeve — pouch may have stretched.

Severe Reflux After Sleeve

New-onset GERD or worsening reflux requiring revision to bypass.

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Stretched Pouch

Stomach pouch dilated over time, reducing restriction.

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Complications

Stricture, fistula, ulcer, or other issues requiring surgical correction.

Stronger Metabolic Effect

Need for greater diabetes/metabolic resolution than first surgery achieved.

The Procedure

What Is Bariatric Revision?

Revision surgery modifies or corrects a previous bariatric procedure when the patient has weight regain, inadequate weight loss, severe reflux, complications, or anatomical issues. It is technically harder than a first-time procedure.

Altered anatomy from prior surgery
Scar tissue increases complexity
Higher complication rates
Requires advanced laparoscopic skills
Bariatric surgeon performing robotic Da Vinci surgery

Revision Options

Five Common Revision Procedures

S→B

Sleeve to Bypass

Most common revision. Addresses reflux, weight regain after sleeve.

S→D

Sleeve to SADI-S

Stronger metabolic tool — for higher BMI patients with weight regain.

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Band Removal

Removal of failed gastric band, sometimes combined with new procedure.

B→S

Band to Sleeve/Bypass

Convert removed band to sleeve or bypass for proper restriction.

Pouch Revision

Resize stretched pouch from previous bypass to restore restriction.

Premium hospital exterior in Mexico for bariatric surgery patients

Pre-Op Evaluation

Why Revision Requires Special Workup

Patients usually need imaging, endoscopy, lab work, review of previous surgical records, and a detailed consultation. This is not optional — it determines what revision (if any) is appropriate.

Upper endoscopy
Imaging (CT or barium swallow)
Comprehensive labs
Prior surgery records review
Detailed surgeon consultation

“Revision surgery should always be performed in a hospital setting by a surgeon with documented revision experience. The complications rate is higher than primary procedures — surgeon skill is the most important variable.”

— Editorial — Mexico Gastric Surgery Guide

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The most common revisions are sleeve to bypass (for reflux or weight regain) and sleeve to SADI-S (for stronger metabolic effect at higher BMI).

It depends on the reason for revision. Severe reflux usually points to bypass; weight regain at higher BMI may favor SADI-S. A surgeon evaluation is essential.

Yes — when performed by a surgeon experienced in revision cases, in a hospital setting, with proper imaging and pre-op evaluation.

Common causes include stretched pouch, dietary patterns, hormonal changes, lack of follow-up, or anatomy that did not produce expected restriction. Each requires its own treatment plan.

If you have significant weight regain, severe reflux, persistent vomiting, or complications from a previous bariatric procedure, an evaluation can determine whether revision is appropriate.

Explore Specialized Bariatric Care

Revision surgery requires the right surgeon. Get an honest evaluation of your case.