Reaching goal before VSG
Unless someone's goal was unrealistically high, I doubt it. I don't think a reputable surgeon would do it (exception being a revision).
Liz 5'3" HW: 219 SW: 185 GW: 125 LW: 113 Desired maintenance range: 120-125 CW: 119ish
HI Liz,
I am new to the forum and just wanted to say congrats on reaching your goal! I would love some pointers since we are the same height and not too far from the same beginning weight( I am 35lbs heavier). Also, I wanted to ask a few questions about your plastic surgeries. Thank you!
Angela
It looks like your BMI is 40. When do you plan on having surgery? Many of us have had success losing weight without surgery, but then gain it back. Maintaining is easier after surgery.
If I could have lost the weight and kept it off without surgery, I would have done so, but over the years I lost and gained 100 pounds several times. I knew I needed weight loss surgery.
Laura in Texas
53 years old; 5'7" tall; HW: 339 (BMI=53); GW: 140 CW: 170 (BMI=27)
RNY: 09-17-08 Dr. Garth Davis
brachioplasty: 12-18-09 Dr. Wainwright; lbl/bl: 06-28-11 Dr. LoMonaco
"May your choices reflect your hopes and not your fears."
I lost about a third of my excess weight, around 50lb, while my wife was going through her WLS pre-op, post-op and maintenance by making the fundamental long term lifestyle changes (to the extent that I could - it has to be sustainable even if not "ideal") that we all know that we need to make to be successful and maintained that loss for several years, but couldn't make much more headway without going for the silly diets that we all know don't work long term. The matter that I could maintain the loss that I made drove me toward doing the sleeve to finish the job, rather than something stronger like the DS which has better regain resistance, which I would have done had I regained what I had lost.
This is sorta the point - the VSG, and the RNY as well long term, are good tools for losing weight while we make the adjustments that we need to make to keep it off long term, but many will regain with either of those procedures if the habits haven't been established to maintain the loss - it helps, but doesn't do the whole job. Long term, your meal capacity will be about half what it is today - enough to help you maintain a healthy weight after loss, but plenty to allow regain if you aren't careful.
This doc has a somewhat different perspective than the norm for bariatrics, but it is useful in understanding how much WLS can help you and how much you need to help it. There are several vids that are useful in his series, even if you don't buy into everything that he says (I don't), but I have evolved into dietary habits that are closer to his prescription than to the more normal bariatric progression, and that's been working well for the past seven years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKUJpkO5FyU
1st support group/seminar - 8/03 (has it been that long?)
Wife's DS - 5/05 w Dr. Robert Rabkin VSG on 5/9/11 by Dr. John Rabkin