Wacky Question
Exclusive to the DS and not the gastric bypass is the removal of;
70 percent of the stomach
Appendix
Gall Bladder
Does anyone know how much these 3 actually weigh all up?
The reason i ask is DS seems to be superior to gastric bypass in terms of excess weight loss however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements? Obvisouly the removal of all that from youre insides would make you even lighter on the scales?
70 percent of the stomach
Appendix
Gall Bladder
Does anyone know how much these 3 actually weigh all up?
The reason i ask is DS seems to be superior to gastric bypass in terms of excess weight loss however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements? Obvisouly the removal of all that from youre insides would make you even lighter on the scales?
Yeah, but not by any significant amount. And, many surgeons don't remove the gall bladder and appendix. Mine, for example, only removed the appendix and left the gall bladder.
--gina
--gina
5'1" -- HW 195/SW 187/GW 115 July 08/CW 121 Dec 2012
******GOAL*******
Starting BMI between 35 and 40ish?
Join us on the Lightweights Board!
DS on Aug 9, 2007 with Dr. Hazem Elariny
DS on 04/26/12
The reason we lose so much more is the amount of malabsorption compared to the bypass. At least, that is what I was told. It's because we have the combo of restriciton and malabsorption where the bypass has restriction but much less malabsorption. We do have to take way more vitamins than they do.
I assume this is a serious question. Both the gallbladder and the appendix are tiny, each are only a couple ounces. The stomach is obviously bigger but the removed portion is still under 2 lbs for most people. This would not translate into any significant weight loss, especially when you consider the hundreds of pounds some people lose after having DS surgery.
You're kidding, right?
And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
On July 25, 2012 at 10:01 AM Pacific Time, MsBatt wrote:
You're kidding, right?And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
Well if you dont know already muscle weighs more then fat so the truth is you can calculate just youre bmi have a lowish bmi and yet still have a lot of body fat if allot of the weight u lost was in the form of muscle tissue.
Vice versa u can calculate youre bmi and it can read a high bmi yet u can be slim becauseand not have much body fat if you have have muscle on you.
So by measuring youre body fat percentage you can accuratley tell both how much fat youve lost and how much fat u REALLY have left to loose.
On July 25, 2012 at 12:08 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 10:01 AM Pacific Time, MsBatt wrote:
You're kidding, right?And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
Well if you dont know already muscle weighs more then fat so the truth is you can calculate just youre bmi have a lowish bmi and yet still have a lot of body fat if allot of the weight u lost was in the form of muscle tissue.
Vice versa u can calculate youre bmi and it can read a high bmi yet u can be slim becauseand not have much body fat if you have have muscle on you.
So by measuring youre body fat percentage you can accuratley tell both how much fat youve lost and how much fat u REALLY have left to loose.
I don't necessarily agree with the bmi scale as far as anything over 25 is over weight. But I will say starting at 43 and going to 24, that is mostly fat loss, obviously. Surely I lost muscles bc it doesn't take as much muscle to carry my 160 lb self than a 300 lb self.
But I promise you, the fact that my surgeon took 80% of my stomach, gall bladder and appendix, does not account for my weightloss. Its the malasorption and the restriction of the stomach. Not the missing organs.
On July 25, 2012 at 1:02 PM Pacific Time, Emily F. wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 12:08 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 10:01 AM Pacific Time, MsBatt wrote:
You're kidding, right?And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
Well if you dont know already muscle weighs more then fat so the truth is you can calculate just youre bmi have a lowish bmi and yet still have a lot of body fat if allot of the weight u lost was in the form of muscle tissue.
Vice versa u can calculate youre bmi and it can read a high bmi yet u can be slim becauseand not have much body fat if you have have muscle on you.
So by measuring youre body fat percentage you can accuratley tell both how much fat youve lost and how much fat u REALLY have left to loose.
I don't necessarily agree with the bmi scale as far as anything over 25 is over weight. But I will say starting at 43 and going to 24, that is mostly fat loss, obviously. Surely I lost muscles bc it doesn't take as much muscle to carry my 160 lb self than a 300 lb self.
But I promise you, the fact that my surgeon took 80% of my stomach, gall bladder and appendix, does not account for my weightloss. Its the malasorption and the restriction of the stomach. Not the missing organs.
I know youre weight loss is obviously majority is fat theres no doubting that but a small bit would be muscle tissue thats with both gastric bypass and Ds.I was just wondering as DS is so much so much stronger then gastric bypass on the malabsorbtion part that it would be interesting to know if it would lead to more muscle loss as your not absorbing as much protein and carbs and everything else.
On July 25, 2012 at 1:19 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 1:02 PM Pacific Time, Emily F. wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 12:08 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 10:01 AM Pacific Time, MsBatt wrote:
You're kidding, right?And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
Well if you dont know already muscle weighs more then fat so the truth is you can calculate just youre bmi have a lowish bmi and yet still have a lot of body fat if allot of the weight u lost was in the form of muscle tissue.
Vice versa u can calculate youre bmi and it can read a high bmi yet u can be slim becauseand not have much body fat if you have have muscle on you.
So by measuring youre body fat percentage you can accuratley tell both how much fat youve lost and how much fat u REALLY have left to loose.
I don't necessarily agree with the bmi scale as far as anything over 25 is over weight. But I will say starting at 43 and going to 24, that is mostly fat loss, obviously. Surely I lost muscles bc it doesn't take as much muscle to carry my 160 lb self than a 300 lb self.
But I promise you, the fact that my surgeon took 80% of my stomach, gall bladder and appendix, does not account for my weightloss. Its the malasorption and the restriction of the stomach. Not the missing organs.
I know youre weight loss is obviously majority is fat theres no doubting that but a small bit would be muscle tissue thats with both gastric bypass and Ds.I was just wondering as DS is so much so much stronger then gastric bypass on the malabsorbtion part that it would be interesting to know if it would lead to more muscle loss as your not absorbing as much protein and carbs and everything else.
On July 25, 2012 at 1:19 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 1:02 PM Pacific Time, Emily F. wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 12:08 PM Pacific Time, fatmackn wrote:
On July 25, 2012 at 10:01 AM Pacific Time, MsBatt wrote:
You're kidding, right?And I have no clue where you're getting this: "however that excess weight loss is calculated by weight on scales and not with body fat measurements?"
The DS is a superior surgey not because it causes that much more weight LOSS, but because it makes it so much easier to MAINTAIN that weight loss, long-term. It also allows a much more normal eating plan and lifestyle.
Well if you dont know already muscle weighs more then fat so the truth is you can calculate just youre bmi have a lowish bmi and yet still have a lot of body fat if allot of the weight u lost was in the form of muscle tissue.
Vice versa u can calculate youre bmi and it can read a high bmi yet u can be slim becauseand not have much body fat if you have have muscle on you.
So by measuring youre body fat percentage you can accuratley tell both how much fat youve lost and how much fat u REALLY have left to loose.
I don't necessarily agree with the bmi scale as far as anything over 25 is over weight. But I will say starting at 43 and going to 24, that is mostly fat loss, obviously. Surely I lost muscles bc it doesn't take as much muscle to carry my 160 lb self than a 300 lb self.
But I promise you, the fact that my surgeon took 80% of my stomach, gall bladder and appendix, does not account for my weightloss. Its the malasorption and the restriction of the stomach. Not the missing organs.
I know youre weight loss is obviously majority is fat theres no doubting that but a small bit would be muscle tissue thats with both gastric bypass and Ds.I was just wondering as DS is so much so much stronger then gastric bypass on the malabsorbtion part that it would be interesting to know if it would lead to more muscle loss as your not absorbing as much protein and carbs and everything else.
Just how much muscle mass an individual loses depevds on a lot of factors. Exercise is probably the biggest. One reason that we DSers do eat a lot of protein is to compensate for the malabsorption. (Another reason is because it's GOOD! *grin*)