Consultation got me MORE confused!
I had the RNY in 2002, SW 278; I had complications, back in the hospital 10 days later, surgery 3 weeks after that, developed wound infection, out 3 months. I got down to 200 by December, and then couldn't lose another pound, no matter what I did. I was dedicated to a healthy food regimen and exercise. I could not get under 200 lbs. I dumped, had issues with food getting stuck, a lot of hair loss. I had to work really hard to stay at 200, and gained back 40 lbs, took it off after a year of bootcamp training, and gained it again. I spent years miserable, and finally looked into a revision, revised to the DS on Dec 15.
You need to have a good understanding of what each surgery is. The lapband does not involve any changes to your stomach or intestines, you have a band around your stomach. A VSG (Sleeve) is NOT anything placed around your stomach, your stomach is created into a sleeve, which is half of the DS procedure, minus the switch of the intestines. The DS offers the most restriction and very few people regain, unlike the RNY where there is a 50% regain possibility because it's not restrictive enough, the creation of the pouch and the intestine re-routed to the pouch causes a temporary restriction but the body readjusts itself, making regain very susceptible.
Every weight loss procedure involves a regimen of focusing on protein and vitamin supplements to compensate for the nutrition not gotten from food. Every major surgery has risks. The DS requires the most maintenance, but t's also the surgery with the best track record. I took several supplements with my RNY, and yes, more with the DS. Vitalady provides a start point, you can buy 3 month packages, 1 month, independent, use her list as guideline and make your own purchases. Multi, Calcium, Vit D, iron are what most people need; the rest is based on your own labs. I know band, RNY, VSG success stories. I know plenty of failures. You have to pick the surgery that will be best for YOU. I do recommend the DS over the RNY, it's worth the more sophisticated procedure and post-op regimen. I wish I could have had it first. To me, the RNY is a roll of the dice, and there was no way I was going to get a band on my bypass or a distal bypass to have more of the same problems. I'm a lightweight, but the DS was right for me, it's not just about BMI; it's also about ability to maintain a healthy weight long-term. 125 lbs overweight, makes us morbidly obese too. The bariatric, medical communities have shied away from the DS because it IS a very specialized surgery, the duodenal tissue is THE most sensitive tissue in the human body to sew/stitch. It's imperative if you have the DS you choose an experienced, vetted surgeon. Research, go to DSfacts.com, join the new board http://weightlosssurgery.proboards.com where many DS vets are, read RNY stories, revision stories.
You're welcome :) It's good that you are taking a look at this, because it's exactly what you, anyone needs to consider when approaching a major surgery like this. As for the vitamin regimen, 30 is a number tossed out there quite a bit, but really, a complete list of what you will need to take will depend solely on your labs. What's most important is that you have your blood work done regularly and know, understand what the normal ranges are so you know when you get your results if you are in them or not. Then you can tweak. For sure you will need to take a multi, calcium citrate, D3 (also calcium) likely iron, magnesium and B12. You find chewables for your mutli and calcium, D3, sublingual for B12 (under the tongue) and iron often comes in liquid.
Insurance companies are definitely covering DS, more now than they did before, my RNY to DS revision was covered. Insurance companies are all different. What is key is having a vetted DS surgeon, because their offices usually are also pretty savvy about coding for insurance purposes.
If you are truly leaning toward the DS, I encourage you to also visit the other site, http://weightlosssurgery.proboards.com, because there are far more DS vets there. Also go to http://www.dsfacts.com/ where you see a list of vetted surgeons, then you can research them to see if they are covered in your insurance. Many of the surgeons have their own websites, mine does and it's very good. He publishes a lot of papers which you can find in the newsletters section on the site, http://www.dssurgery.com/
on 1/21/12 5:21 am
Revision to DS 12/15/2011/Dr. Keshishian, Verdugo Hills
RNY 5/11/2002 Dr. Muryama, Northwestern
***RNY complication surgery 5/2011, Hernia repairs 6/2003, 8/2013
SW 240 CW 158-163 Goal and maintaining