Obesity is a chronic disease characterized by excess body fat (BMI ≥30) that increases risk of diabetes, hypertension, fatty liver, and certain cancers.
Why Do I Need Management?
Effective obesity management improves metabolic health, reduces comorbidities, and enhances quality of life.
How Should I Prepare?
- Assessment:
- BMI and waist-circumference measurement
- Laboratory: fasting glucose, lipid profile, liver tests
- Evaluation of eating behaviors, physical activity, and readiness for change
- Goal Setting: Define realistic weight-loss targets (5–10% of body weight initially).
What Happens During Management?
A multidisciplinary approach tailored to you:
- Lifestyle Modification
- Diet: calorie-controlled, Mediterranean or low-carb plan
- Exercise: ≥150 minutes/week of moderate aerobic activity plus resistance training
- Behavioral: self-monitoring, goal-setting, stress management
- Pharmacotherapy (if BMI ≥30 or ≥27 with comorbidities)
- GLP-1 agonists (e.g., semaglutide)
- Orlistat, naltrexone-bupropion as appropriate
- Endoscopic Therapies (if BMI 30–40 with failed conservative measures)
- Intragastric balloon
- Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG)
- Surgical Options (if BMI ≥40 or ≥35 with comorbidities)
- Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB)
- Sleeve gastrectomy
What Can I Expect Afterwards?
- Initial Weight Loss: 5–15% within 6 months depending on modality.
- Monitoring:
- Clinic visits every 4–12 weeks during active treatment
- Regular labs for glucose, lipids, liver function
- Nutritional and psychological support
Risks & Possible Complications
- Medication: gastrointestinal upset, rare gallstones
- Endoscopic: nausea, suture or balloon-related complications
- Surgical: leaks, nutritional deficiencies, hernias
Report severe side effects, signs of malnutrition, or procedure-related complaints immediately.
Follow-Up
- Long-term follow-up for at least 2 years to monitor weight maintenance
- Annual screening for obesity-related complications (diabetes, fatty liver, sleep apnea)
- Ongoing access to nutrition, exercise, and behavioral support teams

