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Having a Baby After Weight Loss Surgery

Cara Stewart, RD, LDN, member of the Penn Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery team, and Monica A. Mainigi, MD, fertility specialist at Penn Fertility Care, provide important information for women trying to become pregnant and maintain a healthy pregnancy after weight loss surgery.

Many women struggle with fertility as a result of their weight. In fact, obesity puts women at greater risk for ovulation dysfunction and menstrual irregularity, both of which can interfere with fertility. In addition, obesity can lead to an increased risk of miscarriage and decreased success with fertility treatments. For overweight women who are having a hard time conceiving, weight loss surgery may be an option to consider.

For women considering pregnancy after they have had bariatric surgery, it is important to keep the following information in mind.


Fertility boost
Obesity can interfere with hormone production, making it more difficult to get pregnant.  Weight loss after bariatric surgery can lead to regular cycles and ovulation, and improved fertility. In fact, a 2005 study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism found that surgical weight loss for women with PCOS often resolved their reproductive and metabolic abnormalities. 

Healthier pregnancy, healthier baby
After weight loss surgery, medical conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes are significantly improved or resolved leading to a lowered risk of developing serious complications during pregnancy or delivering a baby born with complications.  Many women are still obese after weight loss surgery which places them at a higher risk for gestational diabetes and preeclampsia, but the risk is far less than before surgery.  Pregnant women who have had bariatric surgery should see a high-risk obstetrician to best manage prenatal care.

Give it time
It is important to wait at least 18 months after surgery to start trying to get pregnant. In the period immediately following gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy, rapid weight loss causes stress on the body, including diminished nutrition intake, which can cause complications for an expecting mother and growing baby. Effective contraception is absolutely critical for women pursuing weight loss surgery.  For women with an adjustable gastric band, fluid may be removed from the band during pregnancy to accommodate the need to eat more calories.

Keep supplementing
Good nutrition is especially important for women trying to conceive.  After weight loss surgery, patients are at a higher risk for deficiencies of certain nutrients, including vitamin B12, folic acid, calcium, iron, and vitamin D. It essential to continue taking vitamin and mineral supplements as recommended by the bariatric team.

Be ready for weight gain
After having weight loss surgery, it can be difficult to accept that pregnancy is a time when it is normal, healthy and necessary to gain weight.  Healthy weight gain during pregnancy is important to nourish a growing baby, but work with the program dietitians to avoid unhealthy weight gain during pregnancy.

The Penn Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Program offers lifelong follow-up care and nutritional support for patients who have had weight loss surgery. Women considering pregnancy after weight loss surgery should discuss their plans with the bariatric surgery team.

For more information on fertility services at Penn Medicine, visit the Penn Fertility Care website.

- Cara Stewart, RD, LDN and Monica Mainigi, MD

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