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The hidden risk of protein deficiency in bariatric surgery

Kevin Huffman, DO
Conditions
April 10, 2026
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I have treated over 10,000 bariatric patients across my career, and if there is one issue that comes up more than almost anything else, it is protein. Specifically, patients not getting enough of it. The research confirms what I see every day in practice. Only a minority of bariatric patients reach the recommended minimum of 60 grams per day, resulting in the loss of fat-free mass rather than the desired loss of fat mass. These are not minor shortfalls. The consequences are real: muscle loss, fatigue, thinning hair, slow wound healing, and weakened immunity.

What frustrates me most is that this problem is largely preventable. But it requires a more honest conversation about why patients struggle with protein in the first place and what we as clinicians can do to actually help them succeed.

What changes after bariatric surgery

Bariatric surgery fundamentally alters how the body takes in and processes food. Whether a patient undergoes a gastric sleeve, a gastric bypass, or a duodenal switch, the result is a dramatically smaller stomach capacity and, in some procedures, changes to how the intestines absorb nutrients.

This means patients cannot eat the same volume they once could. Meals become smaller. Fullness sets in faster. And the body’s demand for protein does not decrease just because the stomach has been resized. If anything, the need for protein becomes more urgent. A large systematic review and meta-analysis found pooled lean body mass loss of approximately 8 kilograms at 12 months, with over 55 percent of that loss happening within the first three months after surgery.

Protein is also critical for wound healing after surgery, for maintaining immune function during a vulnerable recovery window, and for sustaining energy levels as the body adjusts to a dramatically lower caloric intake. The general recommendation I give most patients is around 75 grams of protein per day as a starting point, and then I adjust from there based on individual factors. The American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS) recommends 60 to 100 grams per day depending on the patient.

That number is not arbitrary. It reflects the minimum threshold most patients need to protect their muscle tissue, support healing, and maintain basic metabolic function. And yet the majority of patients I see are not consistently hitting it.

Why patients fall short

There is no single reason why bariatric patients struggle with protein. It is usually a combination of physical, behavioral, and systemic factors working against them. The most common issue I see in my practice is that patients rely on grazing throughout the day rather than prioritizing protein-dense foods at scheduled intervals. Since most people cannot eat very much at one time, they default to whatever is convenient. But convenience foods are rarely protein-rich. A handful of crackers or a few bites of toast might satisfy the immediate sensation of hunger, but they do very little for the body’s actual nutritional needs.

There are also physical changes that make protein harder to consume. Roughly two-thirds of gastric bypass patients experience some degree of food intolerance, with red meat being the most commonly reported problem food. These aversions are not psychological. They are well-documented physiological responses to the surgical changes in the gut. After the creation of a small gastric pouch, both stomach acid and pepsin production are reduced, making it physically difficult to break down fibrous protein sources like beef and poultry. These intolerances can persist for months.

Then there is the supplement problem. Many patients turn to protein shakes and bars as their primary protein source, which can work well in the early stages. But not all supplements are created equal. Some are loaded with sugar, artificial ingredients, and fillers that add calories without delivering high-quality, bioavailable protein. Patients assume that any shake labeled “high protein” is doing the job, when in reality, the quality and composition of the protein matters enormously.

And finally, life simply gets in the way. Meal prep fatigue sets in. Social eating situations create pressure to eat whatever is available. The structured support that existed in the weeks immediately after surgery fades, and patients are left to navigate their new nutritional reality largely on their own.

The role of the surgery type

One of the things I always emphasize is that protein needs are not the same across all bariatric procedures. Patients who undergo malabsorptive procedures like the duodenal switch typically require a higher daily intake, often 90 to 100 grams, compared to those with restrictive procedures like the gastric sleeve. Protein malnutrition is the most severe macronutrient complication I see associated with malabsorptive surgical procedures.

This distinction matters because a one-size-fits-all protein recommendation can leave some patients chronically under-nourished while giving others a false sense of security. A patient with a duodenal switch who is only consuming 65 grams per day may be hitting a number that sounds reasonable but is actually insufficient for their specific physiology.

This is why individualized nutritional planning is so important. Surgery type, body composition, activity level, and even the stage of recovery all influence how much protein a patient truly needs. A number on a handout is not enough. Patients need a plan that reflects their actual situation.

Recognizing the warning signs

Protein deficiency after bariatric surgery does not always announce itself in obvious ways. The symptoms often develop gradually and are easy to dismiss as normal parts of the post-surgical adjustment. Hair thinning is one of the most visible early signs, and it is also one of the most distressing for patients. But it is far from the only indicator. Persistent fatigue that does not improve with rest, slow wound healing, frequent illness, and a general sense of physical weakness can all point to inadequate protein intake.

On the clinical side, lab markers like albumin, prealbumin, and total protein levels can reveal deficiencies before the physical symptoms become severe. In my experience, relying on albumin alone misses a significant number of protein-deficient patients. Prealbumin is a more sensitive early indicator, and I have seen mild depletion on prealbumin in a substantial portion of my sleeve and bypass patients within just three months of surgery.

Additionally, the risk of sarcopenia, the degenerative loss of muscle mass and strength, increases substantially after surgery. This is why I advocate for regular lab monitoring, not just at the standard post-operative checkpoints, but as an ongoing part of each patient’s long-term care plan.

What actually helps patients succeed

The first and most important strategy is structuring meals around protein. I call it the “protein first” approach, and it is non-negotiable for my patients. At every meal and snack, protein should be the priority. If a patient has room for only four or five bites, those bites need to be protein-dense. Everything else comes second.

For patients who struggle with shakes, I remind them that shakes can be a temporary bridge. We can pivot to food-based protein sources like Greek yogurt, eggs, soft fish, and tender poultry as soon as their healing stages allow. The goal is not to live on supplements forever. The goal is to build a sustainable relationship with real, whole food sources of protein that the patient can tolerate and enjoy.

When supplements are needed, quality matters. I developed AmBari Nutrition specifically because I saw too many of my patients relying on products that were not designed with bariatric physiology in mind. A good bariatric protein supplement should deliver high bioavailability, a complete amino acid profile, low sugar, and easy digestibility. These are not nice-to-haves. They are requirements for a patient population with limited intake capacity.

Beyond the food itself, tracking makes a meaningful difference. Whether patients use an app, a simple journal, or a check-in system with their care team, the act of monitoring protein intake creates accountability and reveals patterns. Many patients are genuinely surprised to discover how far below their targets they actually fall on a typical day.

And most importantly, the plan has to be individualized and revisited regularly. A nutrition plan created at the six-week post-operative visit should not be the last conversation a patient has about protein. Bodies change. Tolerances shift. Life circumstances evolve. The nutritional plan needs to evolve with them.

Where the medical community needs to do better

I have spent years training physicians and health care providers in bariatric medicine, and one of the things I return to again and again is this: The most common error clinicians make when talking to patients about protein is giving a generic numerical goal without providing a practical daily guide on how to actually achieve those levels within a restricted pouch capacity.

Telling a patient “you need 75 grams of protein a day” is not helpful if that patient has no idea what 75 grams looks like in the context of eating six tiny meals from a stomach the size of an egg. We need to translate the number into a concrete, actionable daily framework that accounts for real-world limitations.

This also means that the conversation about protein cannot end at the surgical follow-up visit. Too many bariatric patients are cleared from their surgeon’s care and then left to figure out long-term nutrition on their own. Primary care providers, dietitians, and bariatric specialists all have a role to play in keeping protein adequacy on the radar.

We owe our patients more than a number on a discharge sheet. We owe them a plan, ongoing support, and the honesty to acknowledge that meeting protein goals after bariatric surgery is genuinely difficult. It is not a matter of willpower. It is a matter of physiology, education, and access to the right tools and guidance.

The bottom line

Protein deficiency after bariatric surgery is one of the most common and most preventable complications I see in practice. It is not inevitable, and it is not the patient’s fault. It is the result of a gap between what surgery demands from the body and what patients are equipped to provide without proper support.

If you are a bariatric patient reading this, know that struggling with protein does not mean you are failing. It means you are dealing with a real, physiological challenge that deserves real, practical solutions. Talk to your care team. Track your intake. Prioritize protein at every opportunity. And do not settle for supplements that are not designed for your needs.

If you are a clinician, I encourage you to revisit how you counsel your bariatric patients about protein. Move beyond the number and into the strategy. Your patients will be better for it.

Kevin Huffman is a board-certified bariatric physician and a nationally recognized leader in obesity medicine. After treating more than 10,000 patients over two decades of clinical practice, he founded American Bariatric Consultants, where he has mentored hundreds of health care professionals and helped them enter the bariatric medical community.

Dr. Huffman currently serves as medical director of AmBari Nutrition and sits on the corporate councils of both the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery and the Obesity Action Coalition. A graduate of the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, he is a frequent consultant and lecturer on balancing high-quality bariatric treatment with the day-to-day realities of medical practice management.

Professional updates are available on LinkedIn.

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