Dr. Elliot - we have some questions
Since there are a few of us trying to stay on track (get on track) we are wondering at 4+ years out, what should out calorie intake vs. calorie burning be?
And for water we should aim for 60+ oz a day, trying to hold off about 1 hour after eating before beginning to drink again, correct?
Anyone else have a question, add it on.? :)
And for water we should aim for 60+ oz a day, trying to hold off about 1 hour after eating before beginning to drink again, correct?
Anyone else have a question, add it on.? :)
court.. you covered what i need to know.. i just work out and burn sometimes 800 calories doing cardio and i give myself a 1,100 day of calories i can consume.. but with working out that number goes up but i still stay in the 1,100 so im burning more and not losing it as fast... very confusing.. lol im thinking about getting a trainer.. im told to drink more protein and water and it will come off.. but im drinking about 75oz of water daily now.. and i get about 75g plus of protein daily
id love to know the answer..
thank you Beth
id love to know the answer..
thank you Beth
Hi y'all,
Thanks for your questions. Sorry been out of the loop for a few days. As far as "steady-state" post-RNY calorie intake, there are no hard & fast rules or data. I try to get my patients, long-term, to get out of burden of having to count calories or grams of protein every day for the rest of their lives. Rather, I think healthy habits may help them keep weight stable as well as their sanity!
These habits include:
1) Three (not 2, not 6) solid meals (not soup, not yogurt) daily, each no bigger than one-1.25 cup in size (and, yes, you have to MEASURE that meal at least once a day because your eyes will LIE to you about how big your meal is!!), and each consisting, half of good protein (meat, egg, fish) & half green veggies; SCANT amounts (< 1 TBSP) starch like potatoes & even fruit. Watch the sauces, gravies, salad dressings (use "spritzer" instead of Ranch....)
2)Hydration: at least 48 ounces , preferably 60 ounces daily liquids a) non-carbonated! b) no calories!! (yes, there are calories in fruit juice, lattes, sweet tea, Gatorade, skim milk; cut out protein drinks between meals too - you don't need extra protein if you're eating meals right); c) between meals (don't drink with meals or 60-90 minutes afterward).
3) No other calories between meals: keep a journal to see if you're sneaking in calories - coffee creamer, handful of nuts or crackers at work, nighttime TV-watching deserts etc. Also watch for those liquid calories.
4) Exercise! At least 3 days a week.
With this, I would think most individuals should be getting 1200-1500 cal a day, balanced by similar expenditure with exercise.
If you're following these guidelines and a) 1.25 cup food doesn't fill you up, 2) you're getting STARVED 3 hours after meal and c) you know you're not drinking with or within 1 hour after meal, it could mean your pouch or stoma are stretched, & you might benefit from having your surgeon check it out.
Thanks for your questions. Sorry been out of the loop for a few days. As far as "steady-state" post-RNY calorie intake, there are no hard & fast rules or data. I try to get my patients, long-term, to get out of burden of having to count calories or grams of protein every day for the rest of their lives. Rather, I think healthy habits may help them keep weight stable as well as their sanity!
These habits include:
1) Three (not 2, not 6) solid meals (not soup, not yogurt) daily, each no bigger than one-1.25 cup in size (and, yes, you have to MEASURE that meal at least once a day because your eyes will LIE to you about how big your meal is!!), and each consisting, half of good protein (meat, egg, fish) & half green veggies; SCANT amounts (< 1 TBSP) starch like potatoes & even fruit. Watch the sauces, gravies, salad dressings (use "spritzer" instead of Ranch....)
2)Hydration: at least 48 ounces , preferably 60 ounces daily liquids a) non-carbonated! b) no calories!! (yes, there are calories in fruit juice, lattes, sweet tea, Gatorade, skim milk; cut out protein drinks between meals too - you don't need extra protein if you're eating meals right); c) between meals (don't drink with meals or 60-90 minutes afterward).
3) No other calories between meals: keep a journal to see if you're sneaking in calories - coffee creamer, handful of nuts or crackers at work, nighttime TV-watching deserts etc. Also watch for those liquid calories.
4) Exercise! At least 3 days a week.
With this, I would think most individuals should be getting 1200-1500 cal a day, balanced by similar expenditure with exercise.
If you're following these guidelines and a) 1.25 cup food doesn't fill you up, 2) you're getting STARVED 3 hours after meal and c) you know you're not drinking with or within 1 hour after meal, it could mean your pouch or stoma are stretched, & you might benefit from having your surgeon check it out.
David C. Elliott, MD, FACS, FASMBS
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA
Oh, forgot: vitamins.
I usually recommend Flinstones Complete or Centrum Chewable, initially 2 daily in AM for 1st 6 months (when meal size is < 1/2 cup) and 1 daily thereafter, forever.
Only other supplement needed is Calcium/Vitamin D (you can't take calcium with iron, as they interfer with each other's absorption); calcium is best absorbed in afternoon, so I recommend a Viactive Chew after lunch & 1 after dinner - almost like a desert!
I usually recommend Flinstones Complete or Centrum Chewable, initially 2 daily in AM for 1st 6 months (when meal size is < 1/2 cup) and 1 daily thereafter, forever.
Only other supplement needed is Calcium/Vitamin D (you can't take calcium with iron, as they interfer with each other's absorption); calcium is best absorbed in afternoon, so I recommend a Viactive Chew after lunch & 1 after dinner - almost like a desert!
David C. Elliott, MD, FACS, FASMBS
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA
Oh yeah PS to my "healthy habits" above: that's for MAINTAINING weight in RNY steady state. If you want to LOSE more:
a) increase exercise to 5-6 days per week
b) no snacks at all
If a RNY patient finds they're losing TOO MUCH weight (which occasionally happens), I'd rather them add 1-2 healthy snacks/day (deli meat, fruit; not Snickers or Nabs) than increase meal size or give up on exercise
a) increase exercise to 5-6 days per week
b) no snacks at all
If a RNY patient finds they're losing TOO MUCH weight (which occasionally happens), I'd rather them add 1-2 healthy snacks/day (deli meat, fruit; not Snickers or Nabs) than increase meal size or give up on exercise
David C. Elliott, MD, FACS, FASMBS
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA
Bariatric Surgeon & Bariatric Medical Director
Parham Doctors' Hospital
Richmond, VA