Alobariatrics

20,000+ Procedures · 20+ Years · Board-Certified

POST-SLEEVE COMPLICATIONS

How to Fix Acid Reflux After Gastric Sleeve Surgery

Reflux after sleeve happens to 20-30% of patients. Some cases respond to diet and medications; others need conversion to bypass. Here is how to know.
By Dr. Alejandro López Ortega · Bariatric & Metabolic Surgeon · ALO Bariatrics
Acid reflux after gastric sleeve treatment

The Short Version

Acid reflux affects 20-30% of post-sleeve patients — about half pre-existing, half new. First-line: PPI medication (omeprazole, esomeprazole) + diet adjustments (smaller meals, no eating before bed, avoid trigger foods). For PPI-resistant or severe cases, conversion to gastric bypass is the most effective revision. Untreated chronic reflux risks Barrett esophagus and esophageal cancer.
Acid reflux is the most common late complication after gastric sleeve. The new sleeve shape can disrupt the lower esophageal sphincter, allowing acid up. For some patients it is mild and manageable; for others severe and persistent. Knowing which path you are on — and when to escalate — protects your esophagus long-term.

Why sleeve causes reflux

Three mechanisms: (1) The vertical sleeve creates higher internal pressure with each meal — more pressure pushing contents up. (2) Sleeve surgery may weaken or distort the lower esophageal sphincter (LES). (3) Hiatal hernia (often unnoticed pre-op) becomes apparent post-op as reflux symptoms. New-onset GERD is common (about 15% of sleeve patients); worsening of pre-existing GERD is also common (about 30% of those who had it).

Six things to know about post-sleeve reflux

1 OF 6

PPIs are first-line treatment

Omeprazole, esomeprazole, pantoprazole — 20-40 mg daily. Most mild-moderate reflux responds within 2-4 weeks. Long-term PPI use is generally safe but watch for calcium and B12 absorption.

2 OF 6

Diet changes help a lot

Avoid trigger foods (citrus, tomato, spicy, fatty, chocolate, caffeine, alcohol). Smaller portions. No eating 2-3 hours before lying down. Sleep with upper body elevated.

3 OF 6

Lifestyle matters

Weight stable or losing (post-op patients usually losing — good). Avoid tight clothing. No smoking. Limit alcohol. Stress management. These basics resolve some mild cases without medication.

4 OF 6

Severe or PPI-resistant cases need evaluation

Upper endoscopy + 24-hour pH monitoring document severity. Hiatal hernia repair sometimes added. Conversion to gastric bypass is the most effective surgical revision for refractory cases.

5 OF 6

Long-term untreated reflux is dangerous

Chronic acid exposure damages esophageal lining → Barrett esophagus → esophageal cancer risk. Do not ignore persistent symptoms. Annual endoscopy if Barrett develops.

6 OF 6

About 5-15% of sleeve patients eventually need bypass conversion

Conversion is highly effective — 85-90% reflux resolution. Adds the malabsorptive component, sometimes additional weight loss. Major procedure but life-changing for severe reflux patients.

Pin this

PPI + diet + no eating before bed handles most cases. PPI-resistant + endoscopy abnormal → conversion to bypass. Untreated chronic reflux raises esophageal cancer risk.

A stepwise treatment plan

Step 1 (mild): diet adjustments (avoid triggers, smaller meals, no late eating) + PPI 20 mg daily for 8 weeks. Step 2 (moderate): PPI 40 mg daily + lifestyle + add H2 blocker (famotidine) at bedtime. Step 3 (resistant): upper endoscopy + 24-hour pH monitoring. Identify hiatal hernia if present. Step 4 (severe or persistent): consider revision surgery — conversion to gastric bypass for definitive treatment. Step 5 (Barrett esophagus detected): annual or biannual endoscopy with biopsies, more aggressive treatment, possibly endoscopic ablation.

Lifestyle changes that actually help

Sleep position: head of bed elevated 6-8 inches (wedge pillow or bed risers, not just extra pillows). Sleep on left side preferred. Meal timing: no food 2-3 hours before lying down. Earlier dinner. Meal size: follow your sleeve restriction — overfilling pushes acid up. Foods to limit: citrus, tomato sauce, chocolate, mint, coffee, alcohol, spicy foods, fried foods, raw onions, garlic. Foods that help: lean proteins, oatmeal, bananas, ginger, low-acid vegetables. Other: no tight waistbands, no eating in front of TV (overeating), chew thoroughly.

Reflux not responding to PPI?

We run reflux workups including endoscopy and pH monitoring. Conversion to bypass is highly effective for refractory cases. Honest assessment of whether medication adjustment, endoscopic options, or surgery is the right next step.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common but not universal — 20-30% of patients experience some degree. About 15% is new onset; 30% is worsening of pre-existing GERD. Some patients have no reflux at all.
As long as symptoms require. Some patients use temporarily during early recovery; others need long-term. Long-term PPI use is generally safe but requires periodic monitoring of B12, magnesium, calcium.
Yes — conversion to gastric bypass is the standard revision for refractory reflux. 85-90% effective. Re-sleeve worsens reflux and is contraindicated for GERD patients.
Heartburn is a symptom. GERD is the chronic disease — symptoms multiple times per week or documented esophageal damage on endoscopy. Most patients with persistent symptoms after sleeve have GERD by definition.
Untreated chronic reflux can lead to esophagitis (inflammation), strictures, Barrett esophagus, and rarely esophageal cancer. With proper treatment, damage is preventable.
Sometimes — if a clear hiatal hernia is the main contributor, repair alone may resolve symptoms. Often combined with conversion to bypass for maximum effect.
Yes — Tums, Maalox, Mylanta for occasional breakthrough relief. Not as effective as PPIs for persistent symptoms. Watch for calcium overload if used heavily.

Bottom line

Acid reflux after gastric sleeve is common, often manageable, and never to be ignored. Start with PPI + diet + lifestyle. If those fail, get endoscopy and pH monitoring. For severe or refractory cases, conversion to gastric bypass is highly effective. Untreated chronic reflux is the path to esophageal damage. Treat it actively, escalate when needed, and your sleeve continues to work for you long-term.