Bariatric Surgery
What is bariatric surgery?
Weight-loss surgery, also known as bariatric surgery, is one of the most successful treatments for severe obesity.1 And robotic surgery with da Vinci is the most common bariatric approach.2
The goal for bariatric surgery is to reduce your weight by: Restricting the amount of food your stomach can hold and/or limiting the amount of nutrients your body can absorb.3
There are many ways to lose weight that you can explore with your doctor, such as diet, exercise, medication, and surgery. If you’re considering bariatric surgery, your surgeon should discuss your options with you. Surgery alone is not enough. You must follow the recommendations regarding changes in diet, exercise, and any other recommendations from your healthcare team after surgery for you to make a lasting change.
Real stories. Real commitments.
Watch Aly, Mike, and Robin share their weight-loss journeys. They describe the challenges, triumphs, and moments of resilience that led them to a healthier future.
Minimally invasive bariatric surgery
Bariatric procedures include gastric bypass surgery (Roux-en-Y gastric bypass or RYGB) and sleeve gastrectomy, also known as gastric sleeve.
Both sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass surgeries can be performed with robotic-assisted surgery using da Vinci technology. With the da Vinci system, your surgeon sits at a console near you in the operating room. Through the console, the surgeon controls a camera and the tiny instruments used to perform your surgery through a few incisions about the size of your fingertip.
The system delivers 3D high-definition views, giving your surgeon a crystal-clear view of the surgical area magnified 10 times what the human eye sees. It translates every movement your surgeon makes in real time, bending and rotating instruments that move like a human hand, but with a greater range of motion. Built-in tremor filtration technology helps your surgeon move each instrument with smooth precision.
The da Vinci system is a tool used to perform minimally invasive bariatric surgery, but it does not treat obesity alone long term.
The demonstration of safety and effectiveness for the representative specific procedures including bariatric surgery was based on evaluation of the device as a surgical tool and did not include evaluation of outcomes related to the treatment of cancer (overall survival, disease-free survival, local recurrence), except for radical prostatectomy (dV Xi/X) which was evaluated for overall survival, or treatment of the patient’s underlying disease/condition. Device usage in all surgical procedures should be guided by the clinical judgment of an adequately trained surgeon.
Da Vinci system overview
Learn more about da Vinci system technology and more about robotic-assisted minimally invasive surgery.
What to expect
Explore what happens on the day of surgery with the da Vinci system and tips for planning and preparation.
Bariatric surgery brochure
Get further detail about bariatric surgery options in our brochure designed for patients and their families.
Types of surgery with da Vinci systems
General surgeons perform robotic surgery using da Vinci systems in many types of procedures.
- American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. 2021 Metabolic and bariatric surgery. Web. 30 October 2024
- Data on file at Intuitive, August 2024
- American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. Bariatric Surgery Procedures. Web. 6 November 2024