Failed Surgery- Or it's starting to look that way
Guy,
I am sorry to hear about your frustration with slow weight loss and lack of restriction. I did not have the same surgery, but 66 pounds sounds pretty good to me (or 54, in 4 months). Have you talked to your surgeon about the lack of restriction and the lack of dumping? I know that not all RNYers have the dumping, though it is common to have it. You should have this conversation with your surgeon. He may choose to do the upper GI or he may wait longer to see how you do. I wish you the best in your journey.
Caroline
KAREN W.
I LOVE MY DS!!!!!
STRIVE TO BE THE BEST YOU CAN BE AND DO THE BEST THAT YOU CAN.
Check out www.dsfacts.com and www.duodenalswitch.com for all the accurate information on the great DS, and find surgeons in your area or around the country or out of the country.
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SW: 234.5 CW: 157 GW: 140 - ish
Your weight loss is stellar for less than 4 months out. It seems your concern is the volume you are able to eat and the fact that you don't dump. First of all, when we talk about volume, you also need to talk about the actual weight of the food that you are ingesting. I can eat two cups of popcorn, but I can only eat 2-3 ounces of solid protein like chicken or beef. So total cups mean nothing unless you are referring to an ability to eat 16 oz of steak in one sitting. Then I would say that you have something wrong and the pouch is too large. You talk about eating pasta and carbs and birthday cake. I just wondered why you would even test those boundaries at all when you do know that you can dump even though 40% of RNYers dont dump at all.
It would seem that this is a discussion you need to have with your doctor. If you can honestly say that you can eat 1 pound of meat (which would be two cups) then you surely have a problem that needs to be addressed.
Babs
Thanks to everyone for your honest responses. I just want to clarify a few issues. I track EVERYTHING thing I eat on fitday, just about everyday. (might miss here and there due to activities). For the most part, I keep everyday to approximately 125-150 g proteins, ~60-90 g of carbs, and minimal fats, maybe 30-40 grams. My diet is very regular, especially during the work week. BUT, here's where I'm concerned and I have raised this issue with my surgeon on my 4 post op visits to date. From day 3 after surgery, I was able to consume large amounts of water. I'm talking 20 oz bottles in less than 5 minutes. I didn't purposely start "testing" consumption limits, I was just trying to get in as much fluids as possible, to help me recover. From the first time I realized that I had no "liquid" restrictions, I sensed that I may not have solid restrictions either. And, as I mentioned, I continually brought these issues to my surgeons attention during visits. The response was, well, maybe that's just the way it is.... or consider yourself lucky because some drop weight too fast and have excess skin issues. You'll be fine..... Those reponses weren't exactly comforting, but things were going ok and the weight was dropping regularly. Until this past month. Here's how the monthly weight loss pans out: Month 1 - 25, Month 2- 12, Month 3- 12, and Month 4- only 7. So things have definitely slowed down. Maybe Im being overly concerned. Would it be wrong to ask for an upper GI? What could I really gain from it except, as someone mentioned, answers I don't want to hear. Again, thanks for the responses.