Religious Fasting of Muslim Patients After Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery: a Modified Delphi Consensus
Yazar
Balta, Ahmet Ziya
Omarov, Taryel
Pazouki, Abdolreza
Alqahtani, Aayed R.
Qassem, Mohamed
Rezvani, Masoud
Sabry, Karim
Salim, Safauldeen
Shabbir, Asim
Skalli, Mehdi
Taha, Osama
Talebpour, Mohammad
TAŞKIN, Halit Eren
Taskin, Mustafa
Yunus, Tahir
Jazi, Amir Hossein Davarpanah
Kassir, Radwan
Nimeri, Abdelrahman
AlHamdani, Ali
Hassan, Ibrahim
Illan, Selim Jalil
Inam, Atif
Ismaeil, Aiman
Kayyal, Yasser
Mohammad, Khaleel
Khan, Amir Ulhagh
Kermansaravi, Mohammad
Omar, Islam
Mahawar, Kamal
Shahabi, Shahab
Bashir, Ahmad
Haddad, Ashraf
Abbass, Alaa
Abbas, Syed Imran
Abbas, Mujjahid
Abouzeid, Tarek
Akin, Faki
Aghajani, Ebrahim
Aminian, Ali
AlAnsari, Mohanad
Asghar, Syed Tanseer
Bukhari, Waleed
Elfawal, Mohamad Hayssam
Gado, Waleed
Gawdat, Khaled
Gee, Tikfu
Ghavami, Bijan
Goel, Ramen
AlHadad, Mohammed
AlHadhrami, Bader
AlHaifi, Mohammad
Khoursheed, Mousa
Khwaja, Haris
Kular, K. S.
Layani, Laurent Abram
Maazulhassan, Maazulhassan
Mahdy, Tarek
Maher, Mumtaz
Mansoor, Ebrahim
Mirza, Salman
Niam, Muhammad S.
Üst veri
Tüm öğe kaydını gösterÖzet
Background Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of the Muslim faith. Despite the positive effects of fasting on health, there are no guidelines or clear recommendations regarding fasting after metabolic/bariatric surgery (MBS). The current study reports the result of a modified Delphi consensus among expert metabolic/bariatric surgeons with experience in managing patients who fast after MBS.
Koleksiyonlar
- Makale [92796]