Bariatric Surgery Risks & Safety — Honest About the Numbers
Every surgery carries risk. The right way to evaluate any procedure isn't to be told it's "completely safe" — it's to see the actual numbers, in context, and understand exactly how a serious surgical team minimizes them.
This page is the conversation we have in our consultation room. No marketing language. No promises. Just published data, honest framing, and what we do to keep you safe.
Where bariatric surgery sits compared to other procedures
A risk number means nothing in isolation. It means something only when compared to the alternatives. Here’s how modern laparoscopic bariatric surgery compares to procedures most patients consider "routine" — and to leaving severe obesity untreated.
| Procedure / situation | Approx. published mortality | Setting |
|---|---|---|
| Laparoscopic gallbladder removal | ~0.1–0.2% | Hospital · routine |
| Modern laparoscopic bariatric surgery | ~0.1–0.2% | Hospital · routine in high-volume centers |
| Hip replacement | ~0.3% | Hospital · routine |
| Knee replacement | ~0.2% | Hospital · routine |
| Severe obesity untreated · 5-year mortality | ~5–10× | Higher than the surgery itself |
Figures reflect general published medical literature on surgical and condition mortality. Individual risk varies substantially by patient, BMI, comorbidities, surgeon experience, and surgical setting.
“The riskiest option for most severely obese patients isn’t the surgery. It’s doing nothing.”
— Dr. Alejandro López Ortega, ALO BariatricsThe surgical risks — and how we mitigate each one
Every risk below has a published rate from international bariatric literature. Each also has a corresponding clinical mitigation that experienced bariatric centers use to minimize it.
🩸 Bleeding
~1–2%Some intra-operative or post-operative bleeding can occur during any abdominal surgery, particularly in tissues with higher vascularity.
💧 Staple-line or anastomotic leak
~0.1–0.3%The most-feared bariatric complication. A leak occurs when the new staple line or the new connection between segments doesn't fully seal.
🦠 Surgical-site infection
~0.1–0.2%Infection at incision sites or internal surgical sites is uncommon with modern laparoscopic technique.
🩹 Blood clots (DVT / PE)
~0.1%Bariatric patients have a baseline elevated clot risk; surgery temporarily compounds it. Properly managed, the rate is very low.
🔄 Conversion to open surgery
< 0.5%Very rarely, the surgical team may need to convert from laparoscopic to traditional open surgery for safety. This is not a failure — it's a safety decision.
⚠️ Readmission within 30 days
~3–5%A small number of patients require readmission for issues like dehydration, nausea, or wound concerns. Most resolve quickly with intervention.
Anesthesia risks deserve their own page
Anesthesia for bariatric patients is genuinely different from anesthesia for an average-weight patient — different drug dosing, airway management, and post-op respiratory monitoring. We addressed it in detail on a dedicated page.
Bariatric Anesthesia: What Patients Are Afraid to Ask
Why bariatric anesthesia is different · sleep apnea handling · pre-op screening · what to mention during your pre-anesthesia consultation.
Long-term risks & how we plan for them
Bariatric surgery is a lifelong relationship — not a single event. The long-term risk profile is real, but it’s also predictable and manageable when patients stay engaged with the follow-up plan.
🌿 Nutritional deficiencies
LifelongReduced food intake and (for bypass / SADI-S / DS) altered absorption mean iron, B12, calcium, vitamin D, thiamine, and others can drop without intervention.
🍯 Dumping syndrome (bypass & SADI-S)
Common but manageableEating sugar or simple carbs after gastric bypass can cause cramping, nausea, sweating, and rapid heartbeat. Patients quickly learn to avoid the trigger.
🔥 GERD / acid reflux (post-sleeve)
~10–20%A subset of sleeve patients experience new-onset or worsening reflux. For some, lifestyle/medication is enough; a small minority benefit from conversion to bypass.
💪 Incisional hernias
Rare laparoscopicHernias at incision sites are very uncommon with laparoscopic technique compared to open surgery, but can occur over years.
📈 Weight regain
~10–30% by year 10Some weight regain after the initial loss is common. Significant regain (more than 25–30% of what was lost) is preventable for most patients with continued engagement.
🧠 Mental health & lifestyle adjustment
CommonBody image, relationship dynamics, and changes in alcohol absorption are all real adjustments. Patients who plan for them do best.
The risk of not having surgery
Patients fairly weigh surgical risk. They less often weigh the risk of leaving severe obesity untreated for another decade. The data on that side of the equation is significant.
Published mortality · laparoscopic
One-time risk · profile comparable to gallbladder removal · further reduced at high-volume accredited centers.
Higher mortality vs. matched non-obese populations
Cumulative risk over years · driven by cardiovascular disease, type-2 diabetes complications, sleep apnea, and joint failure · plus quality-of-life costs.
Beyond mortality: cumulative medical cost of untreated obesity (medications, hospitalizations, comorbidity management) commonly exceeds $15,000+ per year for U.S. patients with multiple comorbidities — well above the one-time cost of surgery in five years or less.
When ALO does not recommend surgery
Saying no to a patient who isn’t ready, or for whom surgery isn’t the right answer, is part of being a responsible clinic. We turn cases away — and we tell patients why.
⚠️ We will not recommend bariatric surgery if:
- Active substance-use disorder not in stable, supervised remission.
- Untreated severe mental-health condition that would compromise informed consent or post-op compliance.
- BMI below 30 without significant obesity-related comorbidities.
- Unrealistic expectations — surgery as a quick fix rather than a tool that requires lifelong commitment.
- Pregnancy or planning pregnancy in the next 12–18 months.
- Acute medical conditions that elevate surgical risk beyond benefit.
- Inability to commit to lifelong follow-up and supplementation.
- Severe untreated cardiac or pulmonary disease requiring optimization first.
How we minimize every risk above
No clinic eliminates surgical risk. The clinics with the best outcomes layer multiple safety measures on top of one another. Here’s our stack.
Board-certified surgeons
FACS · ASMBS · IFSO · CMCOEM credentials. Published evidence shows surgical complication rates fall significantly with surgeon experience and case volume.
Accredited private hospitals only
Every procedure performed in a fully-equipped private hospital with 24/7 ICU capability. Never in stand-alone surgical clinics.
20,000+ procedures by Dr. López
Surgeon volume is one of the strongest predictors of safety in bariatric literature. We are a high-volume specialty practice, not a generalist team.
Multi-specialty pre-op evaluation
Bariatric surgeon · anesthesiologist · cardiologist (when indicated) · nutritionist. Cleared before scheduling.
Direct medical-team access · year 1
Your surgeon and coordinator team are reachable throughout your first year — the most active period for follow-up questions. Early communication is what catches issues before they escalate.
Always reachable for your questions
Beyond your first year, our team remains available remotely for medical questions whenever they come up — supplements, lab results, recovery concerns — for as long as you need us. See our recommended lab schedule.
Common patient questions about safety
Is bariatric surgery in Mexico as safe as at home?
Safety depends on three things: surgeon experience, hospital accreditation, and post-op support infrastructure — none of which are determined by geography. ALO operates exclusively in accredited private hospitals with board-certified surgeons and 20,000+ cumulative cases. Our surgical teams hold the same international credentials (FACS, ASMBS, IFSO) as U.S. and Canadian surgeons. The right comparison isn't country to country — it's clinic to clinic, surgeon to surgeon. Results vary by patient.
What happens if I have a complication after returning home?
Every ALO patient receives direct access to our medical team throughout the first year post-op, including direct lines to your surgeon and coordinator. If a complication occurs after returning home: (1) we triage by phone/video, (2) we coordinate with your local physicians, (3) we provide written clinical documentation for your local care team, and (4) where medically appropriate we arrange return travel for in-person care at no additional surgical cost.
How does Dr. López's safety record compare to industry averages?
Specific clinic-level outcome figures are part of the conversation in your individual consultation, where we can discuss them in the context of your specific risk profile. What we can say publicly is that ALO's safety record is consistent with the published profiles of high-volume bariatric centers, and is supported by Dr. López's 20+ years of specialty practice and the international credentials our surgeons maintain. Surgeon volume is one of the strongest predictors of safety in bariatric literature.
What screening do you do before surgery?
Before any patient is cleared for surgery, we complete: medical history and physical, full bariatric lab panel, EKG and cardiac evaluation (echocardiogram or stress test when indicated), respiratory assessment with sleep-apnea screening, anesthesia consultation, and nutritionist consultation. Patients are not scheduled until these are reviewed and cleared.
What can I do to reduce my own surgical risk?
Significant risk-reducers within patient control: stop smoking 6+ weeks before surgery, follow the pre-op nutrition plan, manage existing comorbidities tightly with your physicians, walk daily in the weeks leading up to surgery, and disclose your full medication and supplement list during pre-op evaluation. Patients who do all five have the most favorable risk profile.
Is bariatric surgery riskier for higher-BMI patients?
Higher BMI is one factor in surgical risk, alongside age, comorbidities, and prior surgical history. Modern bariatric protocols are specifically designed to manage high-BMI cases — that's the entire reason a specialized bariatric anesthesia and surgical team matters more for these patients than a generalist team. Read about bariatric anesthesia →
What if I've had previous abdominal surgery?
Prior abdominal surgery is common in bariatric candidates and does not disqualify you. It does require careful pre-op imaging and surgical planning, and may slightly affect operative time. Disclose any prior abdominal procedures during your evaluation so the surgical plan accounts for adhesions or anatomy changes.
Can complications happen years after surgery?
Yes — though rare. Long-term issues are mostly nutritional (preventable with lifelong supplementation), occasional incisional hernia, or weight regain. The lifetime follow-up program is specifically designed to catch and address long-term issues early. Talk to a coordinator about what year-by-year follow-up looks like.
Related ALO resources
Bariatric Anesthesia
Specialized anesthesiology for high-BMI patients.
Am I a Candidate?
2-minute eligibility quiz with BMI calculator.
Dr. Alejandro López
Founding surgeon · 20,000+ procedures · FACS.
Scheduling & Process
End-to-end surgical planning workflow.
Post-Op Lab Schedule
Routine monitoring for life after surgery.
How to Choose a Surgeon
9-point patient checklist before you commit to a clinic.
Gastric Sleeve FAQs
40+ common questions answered by surgeons.
Supplement Guide
Lifelong nutritional protocol after WLS.
Important Patient Information
Risk figures shown reflect general published medical literature on laparoscopic bariatric surgery and condition-specific mortality. Individual risk varies substantially based on BMI, age, comorbidities, surgeon experience, and surgical setting.
Specific clinic outcome data and your personal risk profile are part of the conversation in your individual evaluation, where they can be discussed in the context of your medical history. No surgical procedure is risk-free — risks are reduced through experienced teams, accredited hospital settings, multi-specialty pre-op evaluation, and post-op follow-up commitment from the patient. Do not adjust, pause, or discontinue any prescribed medication based on information on this page.
Discuss your specific risk profile in a free consultation
Industry numbers tell you what’s possible. Your personal evaluation tells you what applies to you. Free 30-minute video consultation with our team. No pressure, no obligation.