During the procedure
Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty is done in the endoscopy unit as an outpatient procedure. General anesthesia is used, so you'll be in a sleep-like state during the procedure.
The procedure is done using a flexible tube called an endoscope. It has a camera and an endoscopic suturing device attached. The endoscope is inserted down the throat into the stomach. The tiny camera and suturing device allow the endoscopist to see and operate inside the stomach without making cuts in the belly.
Using the endoscope, the endoscopist places sutures in the stomach. The sutures change the structure of the stomach, leaving it shaped like a tube. This limits the amount of food you can eat because you feel fuller sooner.
Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty takes about 1 to 2.5 hours.
After the procedure
After the endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty, you wake up in a recovery room, where medical staff watches you for complications.
After recovering from sedation, most people go home the same day. Some people might need to stay overnight in the hospital, but this is rare.
After the procedure, you generally won't be allowed to eat for a few hours. Then you'll start a liquid diet, which you need to continue for at least two weeks.
Eventually, you move on to semisolid foods, and then to a regular healthy diet.