Mayo Clinic's approach

Arizona

Mayo Clinic's campus in Arizona has collaborations between specialties to help people with obesity gain control of their weight through multiple types of interventions in nutrition, medication, endoscopic procedures or surgery.

Specialists work together as a team to develop treatment plans tailored to each person's needs and goals. Your team can include doctors, coordinators and dieticians from Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Endocrinology, General Surgery, Community Internal Medicine, Psychiatry and Psychology, and other specialties, as needed.

Florida

Mayo Clinic's campus in Florida has a dedicated Bariatric Center to help people with obesity gain control of their weight.

Specialists work together as a team to develop bariatric treatment plans tailored to each person's needs. Your team can include bariatric specialists from Endocrinology, General Surgery, Psychiatry and Psychology, General Internal Medicine, dietetics, and other specialties, as needed. The program also includes wellness coaching.

Minnesota

Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, continues to be recognized by the American College of Surgeons as a Comprehensive Center with Adolescent Qualifications. Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, has also met Medicare's facility standards for bariatric surgery.

The Mayo Clinic bariatric care team in Rochester, Minnesota, consists of experts from Endocrinology, Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, dietetics, Gastroenterology, Subspecialty General Surgery, Psychiatry and Psychology, and other specialists, as needed. The program also includes wellness coaching.

Cost estimates

For questions about the cost of the intragastric balloon procedure, call Mayo Clinic's Estimating Services at 507-284-4024.

Expertise and rankings

Experience

Between all three locations, Mayo Clinic surgeons perform more than 2,500 intragastric balloon procedures each year.

Endoscopic intragastric balloon

Weight Loss and Wellness Program: Endoscopic intragastric balloon

Manpreet Mundi, M.D., Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism and Nutrition, Mayo Clinic: When it comes to weight loss, you have many choices but if we look closely at these options, you see that many centers develop expertise in just one aspect of weight loss. Mayo Clinic has always taken a comprehensive approach to health care. So with this in mind, we've developed clinical expertise that's combined with cutting-edge research to create a team that consists of endocrinologists, dietitians, healthcare coaches, psychologists, gastroenterologists and surgeons who will guide you through your entire journey, giving you the best chance of losing weight and keeping it off.

Andres Acosta Cardenas, M.D., Ph.D., Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Mayo Clinic: We take a different approach basically by saying that we need to introduce tools to help you be successful to a diet and a physical activity program. The reason why we believe that tools are essential for weight loss is because your body usually adapts to a weight loss program if it's only based on a diet and exercise program. There are many things in your body that makes it difficult to sustain that weight loss and more importantly, it makes it difficult to fight back what your body is designed to do. Your body is designed to save energy, so if we don't introduce a tool to help us with that diet program and that exercise program, usually people tend to feel very frustrated. With not eating enough calories, they feel a lot of hungry and appetite and moody and so on, so they usually fail their diet, but it's not because the patient doesn't lack motivation or doesn't want to lose weight, it is usually because your body is fighting against us. So this is where we introduce the tools. We have three tools that are essentials. We have medications, endoscopic procedures, and we have surgery.

Advantages of an endoscopic procedure

Dr. Acosta Cardenas: So endoscopic procedures are the new kids on the block for weight loss tools to help us with a diet and exercise program. They are usually better than medications and sometimes they can be as good as bariatric surgery.

The advantages of an endoscopic procedure is that it's an outpatient procedure, so no need to stay overnight. There is no scars, like in surgery. All of this is done by endoscopy. They are usually safer with less complications. Patients tolerate this better and usually the way that they work is by helping the patient by either decreasing their hungry and appetite levels by making you feel full, by either producing and occupying a space in the stomach, like in the example with the balloons, or in the example of the sleeve, by making you feel full by reducing the size of your stomach.

Intragastric balloon procedure

Barham Abu Dayyeh, M.D., Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Mayo Clinic: Let's start by discussing the intragastric balloon procedure which is a procedure that has been recently approved by the FDA for the management of obesity. Basically, it's an endoscopic procedure. That means it's done in an endoscopy unit as an outpatient using the endoscope. The endoscope is a tube that has a camera on its tip that allow us to insert, to go from the mouth and visualize the esophagus and the stomach. Once we visualize the esophagus and the stomach, we place, we guide the balloon which becomes deflated into the stomach. Once we're happy with the position within the stomach, we then insufflate the balloon with about 650 mL of a salt solution called saline. The fully insufflated balloon is about the size of a grapefruit and sits in the stomach doing two things: one, it makes you feel full when you're fasting because there's something sitting in your stomach, and the other thing, once you eat a healthy meal, it will allow you to feel full longer with a healthy meal because it delays the rate by which food is emptying out of the stomach. So the balloon is designed to stay in the stomach for six months because we know that this is the duration where it's safe to keep this balloon in. After six months, you come back to the same endoscopy unit as the balloon was placed and with the aid of the same endoscope, we go inside the stomach again from your mouth, deflate the balloon, and then retrieve it out of your mouth.

As far as the side effects of the balloon, they're rare. In the first week, it's expected that people have some abdominal cramps and some nausea which we call accommodative symptoms that means your stomach is adjusting to the balloon. We manage these usually with anti-nausea medications and pain medication and the vast majority of these symptoms resolve within the first week. More serious side effects are very rare after the balloon but they could include ulcerations of the stomach, tears in the stomach or the esophagus, and obstruction of the small intestines but these side effects are very rare.

The balloon is a temporary tool that will allow you to lose significant amount of weight. You might be asking me how much weight do I expect to lose with the balloon and it's usually the average weight loss has been about 13% of the total body weight. The key for the balloon procedure, it enables you to adopt a healthier lifestyle. And with that tool and with the aid of our team in nutrition and psychology, we will give you a 12-month program to supplement the balloon in order to allow you to adopt a healthier lifestyle that would allow you to maintain the weight loss for the longer term after the balloon.

Post-procedure lifestyle intervention program

Karen Grothe, Ph.D., L.P., Psychiatry and Psychology, Mayo Clinic: For many people it's not a knowledge deficit that's getting in the way of them being successful with managing weight, it's often about habits or behaviors. And many of us do things that we know are not good for us but we continue to do them anyway, and we can help you try to understand a little bit better what some of the triggers are for those behaviors, some of the consequences and help you really make those behavior changes more in the long term. Also, a lot of people struggle with maintaining motivation over the long term, to eat healthy or to be more active, and so psychologists can really help you tap into what motivates you to try to stay healthy. Additionally, some people struggle with stress or depression or addiction to alcohol or tobacco that can interfere with their ability to be successful, and a psychologist can really help you address and treat those things so that you can be more successful in the long term.

Kristine Schmitz, R.D., L.D., Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic: An endoscopic procedure causes changes in how your body handles food and nutrients which require changes on your part to. For example, initially, it's important to have a liquid diet to help with healing. Longer term, we'll want to work with you to optimize your nutrition intake. We'll also work with you to identify incorrect eating habits that can sabotage weight loss efforts and it will be important for you to increase your daily activity. We'll also provide you with information on foods and eating patterns that can help you feel full while lowering your calorie intake, and we'll be here along the way to help provide some coaching and support as you progress on your weight-loss journey.

For more information on the Weight Loss and Wellness Program visit: www.mayoclinic.org or call: 507-284-2111.

Innovative procedures

Mayo Clinic gastroenterologists and surgeons have been involved in developing cutting-edge weight-loss surgeries and procedures, such as intragastric balloons and endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty, among other state-of-the-art surgical techniques. Mayo Clinic was one of the first centers in the United States to offer intragastric balloons and will continue to serve as a training center for these procedures.

A comprehensive team approach

A team of medical experts, including endocrinologists, gastroenterologists, surgeons, dietitians and psychologists, helps identify candidates who could most benefit from weight-loss surgeries or procedures. The team works intensively with you before and after your procedure or surgery to help you achieve a long-lasting result.

In fact, although you'll only have an intragastric balloon for six months, the care you receive at Mayo will continue for at least six months after the balloon is removed to help you maintain your weight loss and health benefits.

Pediatric and teen care

Childhood obesity has emerged as one of the most important public health problems in the United States. At Mayo Clinic, adolescent care includes evaluation for coexisting conditions as well as an assessment of the child's and family's understanding and readiness for a weight-loss procedure. Weight-loss surgery for adolescents is part of a multidisciplinary program with specific expertise in pediatric obesity, bariatric surgery, nutrition and psychology.

Nationally recognized expertise

Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, ranks No. 1 for digestive disorders in the U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals rankings. Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona, and Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, are ranked among the Best Hospitals for digestive disorders by U.S. News & World Report. Mayo Clinic Children's Center in Rochester is ranked the No. 1 hospital in Minnesota, and the five-state region of Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2023–2024 "Best Children's Hospitals" rankings.

Locations, travel and lodging

Mayo Clinic has major campuses in Phoenix and Scottsdale, Arizona; Jacksonville, Florida; and Rochester, Minnesota. The Mayo Clinic Health System has dozens of locations in several states.

For more information on visiting Mayo Clinic, choose your location below:

Costs and insurance

Mayo Clinic works with hundreds of insurance companies and is an in-network provider for millions of people.

In most cases, Mayo Clinic doesn't require a physician referral. Some insurers require referrals or may have additional requirements for certain medical care. All appointments are prioritized on the basis of medical need.

Learn more about appointments at Mayo Clinic.

Please contact your insurance company to verify medical coverage and to obtain any needed authorization prior to your visit. Often, your insurer's customer service number is printed on the back of your insurance card.

More information about billing and insurance:

Mayo Clinic in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota

Mayo Clinic Health System

Clinical trials

Explore Mayo Clinic studies of tests and procedures to help prevent, detect, treat or manage conditions.

Oct. 14, 2023
  1. Obesity, surgical management. Clinical overview. Elsevier; 2022. https://www.clinicalkey.com. Accessed July June 24, 2023.
  2. Feldman M, et al., eds. Surgical and endoscopic treatment of obesity. In: Sleisenger and Fordtran's Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, Management. 11th ed. Elsevier; 2021. https://www.clinicalkey.com. Accessed June 24, 2023.
  3. Silva LB, et al. Intragastric balloon. Minimally Invasive Therapy and Allied Technologies. 2022; doi:10.1080/13645706.2021.1874420.
  4. Shetye B, et al. Bariatric surgery, gastrointestinal hormones, and the microbiome: An Obesity Medicine Association (OMA) Clinical Practice Statement (CPS) 2022. Obesity Pillars. 2022; doi:10.1016/j.obpill.2022.100015.
  5. Types of weight-loss surgery. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/weight-management/bariatric-surgery/types. Accessed June 21, 2023.
  6. Bariatric surgery. Endocrine Society. https://www.endocrine.org/patient-engagement/endocrine-library/bariatric-surgery. Accessed June 21, 2023.
  7. Ami TR. Allscripts EPSi. Mayo Clinic. June 13, 2023.
  8. Bariatric surgery procedures. American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. https://asmbs.org/patients/bariatric-surgery-procedures. Accessed June 21, 2023.
  9. Vargas Valls EJ (expert opinion). Mayo Clinic. July 25, 2023.