Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Procedure: A Bariatric Surgical Procedure for Gastric Resectioning in Murine Model

Published: April 30, 2023

Abstract

Source: Ayer, A., et al., Techniques of Sleeve Gastrectomy and Modified Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass in Mice. J. Vis. Exp. (2017).

This video describes a bariatric surgery-Roux-en-Y procedure. This involves the cutting of the jejunum- the middle portion of the intestine- to generate two intestinal limbs. The biliary limb is attached to the existing intestinal loop and the alimentary limb is attached to the stomach, creating a gastric bypass. The gastric bypass created here helps to decrease the nutrient uptake and efficiently reduces body weight.

Protocol

All procedures involving animal models have been reviewed by the local institutional animal care committee and the JoVE veterinary review board.

1. General Preoperative Preparation

  1. Fast the mice for 6 h before the surgery. Gel diet food was given 3 days before surgery and exclusively one day before surgery. Induce anaesthesia in a chamber with 5% isoflurane (0.4 L/min) and O2 (dioxygen; 0.4 L/min). Perform a toe-pinch test to confirm that the anesthetization is effective. Administer analgesics (0.1 mg/kg buprenorphine), antibiotics (10 mg/kg marbofloxacin), and pro-kinetics (1 mg/kg metoclopramide) via subcutaneous injections.
  2. Allocate a specific work area for surgical procedures (distant from laboratory traffic and ventilation fans). Clean the surgical area with dedicated hard surface disinfectants. Place a heating pad on the working space area to maintain mouse homeothermy during the surgery. Apply a clean, absorbent under pad over the heating pad.
  3. Shave the abdomen from sternum to pelvis using an electric razor. Wrap the mouse abdomen in sterilized plastic wrap (Figure 1A) and place the mouse in supine position on the heating pad.
  4. Apply vet ointment on the eyes to prevent dryness while under anaesthesia. Place the mouse in the nose cone and maintain anaesthesia with 2% isoflurane (0.4 L/min) and O2 (0.4 L/min).
  5. Before beginning the surgery, put on a sterile examination gown, a disposable scrubs cap, a facemask, and sterile gloves. Open an autoclaved package containing a sterilized surgical instrument set, which is required for all steps of the surgery. Cut a window in the sterilized plastic wrap and disinfect the skin with 2 successive povidone-iodine solutions.

2. Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass: Surgical Procedure

  1. Median laparotomy
    1. Under a binocular microscope and with a scalpel, perform a midline incision from the sternum to the middle of the abdomen to open the abdominal cavity (do not damage the abdominal muscles). Protect the skin with a sterile compress soaked with 37 °C saline solution (Figure 1B).
  2. Biliopancreatic limb and alimentary limb
    1. Externalize the intestine (Figure 1C). Measure 8 cm from the pylorus and perform two ligatures of the intestine with 5.0 non-absorbable sutures (Figure 1D).
    2. Cut the intestine between the two ligatures (Figure 1E). Place the proximal limb of the two ends in the upper-left quadrant of the abdomen. Note: This will be used as the alimentary limb (Figure 1F).
    3. Place the distal limb of the two ends facing the alimentary limb 6 cm below the proximal limb (Figure 1F).
      NOTE: This will be used as the biliary limb.
  3. Jejuno-jejunostomy
    1. Cut both the proximal limb and the intestine loop using micro scissors and perform two antimesenteric incisions of the same length (Figure 1G and 1H).
    2. Perform side-to-side anastomosis with two 8.0 non-absorbable sutures. Perform the dorsal side anastomosis first (Figure 1I), followed by the ventral side anastomosis (Figure 1J).
    3. Gently roll 2 moistened cotton swabs towards each side of the anastomosis to ensure that the suture is leak-proof. Complete with 8.0 non-absorbable sutures in case of leakage.
  4. Gastro-jejunostomy
    1. Gently mobilize the stomach using moistened cotton swabs. Free the stomach from its lateral close connective tissue attachments using moistened cotton swabs or micro scissors.
    2. Gently, externalize the stomach fully, placing a re-absorbable hemostatic collagen compress behind the stomach. Perform a ligature of the pylorus using a 5.0 non-absorbable suture passed through the omentum using curved micro forceps (Figure 1K and 1L).
    3. Cut both the ventral side of the stomach, 1.5 cm from the pylorus, and the distal limb using micro scissors, creating two incisions of the same length (Figure 1M).
    4. Perform side-to-side anastomosis with two 8.0 non-absorbable sutures. Start with the dorsal side anastomosis (Figure 1N), and then perform the ventral side anastomosis (Figure 1O). Gently roll 2 moistened-cotton swabs towards each side of the anastomosis to ensure that the suture is leak-proof. Complete with 8.0 non-absorbable sutures in case of leakage.
  5. Abdominal closure
    1. Close the muscle layer of the abdominal wall using 5.0 non-absorbable sutures (Figure 1P). Reduce the anaesthesia by reducing the isoflurane concentration to 1%. Close the skin using 5.0 non-absorbable sutures (Figure 1Q). Administer 25 mL/kg of warm saline solution via subcutaneous injection.

3. General Postoperative Care

  1. Stop isoflurane and continue with an O2 flow of 0.8 L/min until the mouse is fully awake. Do not leave the mouse unattended until it regains motor control, indicated by the animal starting to move around the cage and being able to stand and walk without falling.
  2. Place the mouse (only one mouse per cage) in an incubator under 30 °C temperature condition for 5 days.
  3. Maintain iron (0.5 mg/kg/day; subcutaneous injection) and vitamin (800 mg/180 mL in water) supplementations in the RYGB mice until the end of the protocol.
  4. Return free access to gel diet food (high-fat gel diet: 10% lard, 10% liquid sugar, 57% water) for 5 days after surgery. Reintroduce a solid diet 3 days after surgery.
  5. Subcutaneously inject buprenorphine (0.1 mg/kg, twice daily, from day 0 to day 3 after surgery), meloxicam (1 mg/kg, from day 0 to day 3 after surgery), metoclopramide (1 mg/kg, from day 0 to day 5 after surgery), and marbofloxacin (10 mg/kg, from day 0 to day 3 after surgery)

Representative Results

Figure 1
Figure 1: Roux-en-Y bypass Procedure. (A) Preoperative preparation. (B) Median laparotomy. (C) Externalization of the small intestine. (D) Biliopancreatic and alimentary limbs ligatures. (E) Small intestine section between the ligatures. (F) Intestinal limb positioning for the jejuno-jejunostomy. (GH) Antimesenteric incisions of the proximal limb and the intestine loop. (I) Dorsal side-to-side anastomosis. (J) Ventral side-to-side anastomosis. (KL) Pylorus ligature. (M) Incision of the ventral side of the stomach. (N) Incision of the distal limb and dorsal side-to-side anastomosis. (O) Ventral side-to-side anastomosis. (P) Closure of the muscle layer of the abdominal wall. (Q) Closure of the skin.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

Drugs
High Fat diet DIO diet Safe
Isoflurane Forane Baxter
Buprenorphin Buprecare Animalcare
Marbofloxacine Marbocyl Vetoquinol
Ammonium iron citrate, vitamins
PP-B12
Fercobsang Vetoquinol
Vitamins A-D3-E-K-B Vita Rongeur Virbac
NaCl 0.9% NaCl 0,9%
Povidone solution Betadine Scrub Betadine
Povidone solution Betadine Solution Betadine
Carboptol 980 NF Ocrygel TVM
Sutures
Prolene® 8.0, 6,5 mm Ethicon
Prolene® 5.0, 13 mm Ethicon
Surgical equipments
Scissors FST
Needle holder Olsen-Hegar FST
Micro scissors Vannas FST
Micro forceps Graefe FST
Micro forceps curved Graefe FST
Curved micro needle holder Castroviejo FST
Hemostatic collagen compress Pangen Urgo
Absorbent underpads VWR
Specific equipments
Stereo microscope MZ6 Leica

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Cite This Article
Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Procedure: A Bariatric Surgical Procedure for Gastric Resectioning in Murine Model. J. Vis. Exp. (Pending Publication), e20815, doi: (2023).

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