Schematic of gastric bypass using a Roux-en-Y anastomosis. The transverse colon is not shown so that the Roux-en-Y can be clearly seen. The variant seen in this image is retrocolic, retrogastric, because the distal small bowel that joins the proximal segment of stomach is behind the transverse colon and stomach.
Typically, the two upper limbs of the Y represent (1) the proximal segment of stomach and the distal small bowel it joins with and (2) the blind end that is surgically divided off, and the lower part of the Y is formed by the distal small bowel beyond the anastomosis.[citation needed]
Roux-en-Ys are used in several operations and collectively called Roux operations.[1]
When describing the surgery, the Roux limb is the efferent or antegrade limb that serves as the primary recipient of food after the surgery, while the hepatobiliary or afferent limb that anastomoses with the biliary system serves as the recipient for biliary secretions, which then travel through the excluded small bowel to the distal anastomosis at the mid jejunum to aid digestion. The altered anatomy can contribute to indigestion following surgery.[2] The procedure has also been associated with an increased incidence of iron-deficiency anemia. Iron-deficiency anemia develops in up to 45% of people who have had a Roux-en-Y anastomosis.[3]
^Longo, Dan L.; Camaschella, Clara (7 May 2015). "Iron-Deficiency Anemia". New England Journal of Medicine. 372 (19): 1832–1843. doi:10.1056/NEJMra1401038.
^Lawrence PF. Essentials of general surgery. 3rd Ed. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 2000. ISBN0-683-30133-0.
^Shokouh-Amiri H, Zakhary JM, Zibari GB (April 2011). "A novel technique of portal-endocrine and gastric-exocrine drainage in pancreatic transplantation". Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 212 (4): 730–8, discussion 738–9. doi:10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2010.12.045. PMID21463823.
^van Wagensveld, B. A.; Coene, P. P. L. O.; van Gulik, T. M.; Rauws, E. A. J.; Obertop, H. & Gouma, D. J. (October 1997). "Outcome of palliative biliary and gastric bypass surgery for pancreatic head carcinoma in 126 patients". British Journal of Surgery. 84 (10): 1402–1406. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2168.1997.02799.x. PMID9361599.