Duodenal Switch = better weight loss + more adverse events?
Thank you, Steve!
Check out my profile: http://www.obesityhelp.com/member/goodkel/
Or click on my name
DS SW 265 CW 120 5'7"
Or click on my name
DS SW 265 CW 120 5'7"
So, Slim, when do you write the rebuttal editorial? (You are off to a great start!) You may be the person best qualified to write it in the whole world, what with your experience as a physician and as a DS patient.
If they didn't print it, I would have doubts about that journal, no matter how "respected" it is!
~Lisa
If they didn't print it, I would have doubts about that journal, no matter how "respected" it is!
~Lisa
Dr. Roslin already did:
http://bariatrictimes.epubxp.com/issue/44989/4
http://bariatrictimes.epubxp.com/issue/44989/4
"This is an operation that should probably go away," said Dr. Edward H. Livingston, a professor and surgeon at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
This is a joke, right?
Post RNY I've experienced iron deficiency anemia, low vitamin D, abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction, nausea, noxious gas, diarrhea and gall stones.
I noticed the Limitation at the bottom of the screen. I'm thinking that the DS patients didn't do well because the surgeons didn't know what the heck they were doing or how to manage the patients post op.