Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Bariatric Referral
Pathway
When Bariatric Surgery Is the Right Next Step — What It Involves and How the Referral Works

For women with significant obesity for whom medical management has not produced adequate results, bariatric surgery offers the most substantial and durable weight loss available — alongside profound improvements in diabetes, PCOS, sleep apnea, and cardiovascular risk. Dr. Andrei coordinates bariatric referrals and provides pre- and post-operative gynecologic care.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG coordinates bariatric surgery referrals at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Bariatric Surgery — The Most Effective Long-Term Weight Loss Available

Bariatric surgery produces average weight loss of 60 to 80 percent of excess body weight — significantly exceeding what lifestyle modification and prescription medications alone achieve for most patients with severe obesity. More importantly, the health improvements associated with bariatric surgery frequently go beyond weight loss: type 2 diabetes resolves in 60 to 80 percent of patients after gastric bypass, often before significant weight loss has occurred; hypertension resolves or improves in 75 percent; obstructive sleep apnea resolves in 80 to 85 percent; and PCOS-related hormonal and menstrual abnormalities improve significantly, with meaningful improvements in ovulatory function and fertility in women of reproductive age.

Bariatric surgery is not the right option for everyone with obesity — it is a significant surgical intervention with its own risks and lifelong nutritional and behavioral requirements. But for the right candidates, it offers health improvements that are not achievable through other means, and the decision to pursue it deserves thoughtful, evidence-based clinical discussion rather than default avoidance or default enthusiasm.

Bariatric Surgery — Eligibility, Types, and What to Expect

Who Qualifies

Current eligibility guidelines for bariatric surgery include: BMI of 40 or higher (without weight-related health conditions); BMI of 35 or higher with at least one significant obesity-related health condition (type 2 diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, heart disease, PCOS, severe joint disease); or BMI of 30 to 34.9 with type 2 diabetes or metabolic syndrome that has not been adequately controlled with other interventions. Prior attempts at medically supervised weight loss may be required by insurance before bariatric surgery is approved. Psychological evaluation, nutritional counseling, and medical clearance are components of the standard pre-operative workup. The eligibility assessment and insurance requirements are reviewed at the referral consultation.

Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass

Gastric bypass creates a small gastric pouch connected directly to the small intestine, bypassing the remainder of the stomach and the duodenum. It produces weight loss through restriction (small pouch limits intake) and metabolic effects that are independent of restriction (early delivery of nutrients to the distal intestine produces hormonal changes that improve insulin sensitivity, reduce appetite, and contribute to diabetes resolution). It produces the most robust and durable weight loss of the standard bariatric procedures and the most reliable diabetes resolution.

Sleeve Gastrectomy

Sleeve gastrectomy removes approximately 75 to 80 percent of the stomach, creating a narrow gastric sleeve. It produces substantial weight loss primarily through restriction and the reduction in ghrelin (the hunger hormone) produced by removing the ghrelin-secreting fundus of the stomach. It is currently the most commonly performed bariatric procedure because of its simplicity compared to gastric bypass and its lack of intestinal rerouting, while producing comparable weight loss in most patients.

Bariatric Surgery and Gynecologic Health

Bariatric surgery has specific implications for gynecologic health that are particularly relevant to the discussion at Lapeer Women’s Health. Rapid weight loss after bariatric surgery temporarily increases fertility in women who previously had PCOS-related ovulatory dysfunction — making contraception essential in the first 12 to 18 months post-operatively when nutritional status is too unstable to support a healthy pregnancy. IUD placement before bariatric surgery is a highly practical contraceptive approach. Nutritional deficiencies after bariatric surgery — particularly iron, folate, vitamin B12, calcium, and vitamin D — have specific gynecologic implications including menstrual irregularity, anemia, and bone health that require monitoring. Post-bariatric gynecologic care at Lapeer Women’s Health incorporates these considerations.

The Bariatric Referral Pathway at Lapeer Women’s Health

Clinical Assessment and Candidacy Discussion

The weight management evaluation at Lapeer Women’s Health reviews the full clinical picture: weight history, prior treatment attempts and outcomes, current health conditions, medications, and weight-related health consequences. When the clinical picture suggests that bariatric surgery may be the most appropriate next step, a specific conversation about candidacy, the options available, and what the process involves is initiated.

Bariatric Surgery Referral

Referral to a bariatric surgery program affiliated with our network initiates the formal evaluation process: bariatric surgery consultation, psychological evaluation, nutritional counseling, medical clearance, and insurance authorization. Dr. Andrei coordinates the referral and maintains ongoing gynecologic care throughout the pre-operative evaluation and post-operative recovery.

Pre- and Post-Operative Gynecologic Care

Pre-operative gynecologic care includes contraceptive planning (IUD placement is ideally completed before surgery), addressing any gynecologic conditions that may affect surgical risk or recovery, and establishing the post-operative monitoring plan for nutritional deficiencies with gynecologic implications. Post-operative care monitors iron status, vitamin D, bone health, and menstrual changes that commonly occur in the post-bariatric period.

Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, significantly, for women with PCOS and obesity. The weight loss and metabolic improvements from bariatric surgery produce substantial improvements in PCOS-related hormonal abnormalities: testosterone levels decrease, sex hormone binding globulin increases (reducing free androgen activity), menstrual regularity improves, and ovulatory function is partially or fully restored in many women. These improvements often exceed what is achievable with medical PCOS management alone at equivalent weight. Importantly, the restoration of ovulatory function after bariatric surgery means that women with PCOS who previously had anovulatory infertility may become fertile after surgery — which is why reliable contraception is essential in the post-bariatric period.
The standard recommendation is to wait 12 to 18 months after bariatric surgery before attempting pregnancy. The rapid weight loss phase of the first year after bariatric surgery produces significant nutritional flux — caloric restriction, micronutrient absorption changes, and rapidly shifting metabolic status — that creates a nutritionally unstable environment for fetal development. Pregnancy before the weight has stabilized and nutritional status has been optimized is associated with higher rates of preterm birth, small for gestational age infants, and nutritional deficiency complications. A planned pregnancy after the 12 to 18 month window, with nutritional optimization and pre-conception counseling, produces outcomes much closer to those of non-bariatric pregnancies.
Yes. Bariatric surgery referral coordination and pre- and post-bariatric gynecologic care are available at both the Lapeer office (1245 N Main St, Lapeer, MI — (810) 969-4670) and the Rochester Hills office (2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2, Rochester Hills, MI — (248) 923-3522). No referral is required to schedule your weight management consultation.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
When Medical Management Is Not Enough — Bariatric Referral Coordinated Through Our Practice.

Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health provides the full weight management pathway including bariatric referral at both offices. No referral required.

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Educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.

Gynecologic care for women of every age

Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307

Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.