Opinions?
Hi all, just looking for some feedback/opinions. Today I went to my 3 month post op dietician visit. I worked with her for 6 months pre surgery and really liked her.
However today she told me that I'm losing to fast (I've lost 70 lbs in 3 months, but had surgery at 371 lbs) and that I'm "starving myself." I'm currently having roughly 500 calories a day with 55-65 grams of protein. I have Zero hunger so I eat lunch and dinner and drink a protein shake for breakfast. She told me that I should be aiming for 1200 calories a day and that I need to be eating around 120 carbs a day as well as the 60 grams of protein.
To me, this advice seems crazy. How can I possibly eat that many calories a day and still consistently lose weight? I was literally gaining 1-2 lbs a week diligently eating 1600 calories a day prior to surgery.
Has as anyone else received similar advice? Or for the vets who have lost so much and maintain, did you eat this much and still have success? Thank you.
Lap RNY February 15, 2012
Starting weight 195 (ht. 4'10)
Surgery weight 178.5
Current weight 113
I was a lot bigger than you, and I never got close to 1200 calories while I was losing. I never counted carbs, just calories and protein, but almost no one here will think 120 carbs per day is ok.
I've found the knowledge and experience of nutritionists to be all over the map. It seems to me you are doing a great job so far. If I were to change anything, I'd recommend more protein, not carbs.
6'3" tall, male.
Highest weight was 475. RNY on 08/21/12. Current weight: 198.
M1 -24; M2 -21; M3 -19; M4 -21; M5 -13; M6 -21; M7 -10; M8 -16; M9 -10; M10 -8; M11 -6; M12 -5.
Your doc and nut are better qualified to determine what you need and don't need, and they have a program for you to follow.
That being said, you have to make your choice on what you want to eat. I have seen people lose that fast, and faster, and their doctors commend them. Unless they see something else going on that we don't know about I'm not sure how slow they want you to lose. Especially since we lose so fast in the first few months out.
120 carbs and 60 proteins seems flipped to me, as well. My doc preaches a diet of eggs, meat, cheese, and leafy greens for the first year, then on to maintenance. I can't imagine eating enough greens to get 120 grams of carbs! And I'm not even bypassed yet! So again, this is completely contrary to what my plan calls for. BUT my doctor is not your doctor.
I was never told how many calories to eat, just what to eat. The only carbs my nut has suggested is quinoa, and 2 tablespoons max per day. I was told to aim for 60+ grams of protein, then veggies, and if there's room (there usually isn't) then carbs. 1200 calories seems really high to me.
Referral - Feb 25th, 2014. Info Session - April 7th
Surgeon#1 - May 15th Dr. Glazer - July 23rd, Dietitian/Social Worker/RN - Aug 1st, Surgeon #2 - Sept 10th, Surgery - Dec 16th, 2014!
on 5/29/15 2:09 am
I'm 16 months out and still haven't ever eaten 1200 calories nor that number of carbs. In fact, at 950 calories I am firmly in maintenance-- your NUTS advice sounds good for normies-- not for those of us fighting the disease of obesity
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat
How are your labs? Maybe 500 cal is a bit low? You know what's working for you so I can't say what you should do or not. IMO, you should do what works for you and ride the wave of loss while it's working so well. I was never given any calorie or carb goals, only protein. I think her plan sounds more for non surgical patients than RNY, but every NUT seems to be different. I tend to get as much info as I can and then filter it through common sense, what I have learned here and what I know is working or not working for me personally.
Congrats on your WL so far! You are doing great!
I think it's a matter of every surgeon/team being different. I am 2 month post op RNY and my team has me on 750-800 calories, 60+ protein and no more than 30g carbs a day. I was stalling for about 2 weeks and my nut said my cals were too low (I was doing about 550 average) so she told me up my cals, protein and water and it did the trick!
There is no such thing as losing too fast. You have a lot to lose and a window in which to do it comfortably - no time is as easy as this first six months and to lose the maximum amount you can makes absolute sense to anyone who has had WLS. I had 100lbs to lose and lost 120lbs in six months. Your team can give you guidance, but you are an adult and therefore are totally capable of doing your research and making your lifestyle decisions
Welll done on a stellar job so far!
Proud Feminist, Atheist, LGBT friend, and Democratic Socialist
Thanks for the input everyone! I'm such a rule follower when it comes to this kind of stuff so it's really hard for me not to do as I'm told. However I know my own body much better than anyone else does so I'm going to try and increase calories some, but certainly not to that extreme. I also am going to try to incorporate some natural carbs but her recommendation of rice pasta and crackers will be ignored for now.