For Band Revision Members

NanceC
on 7/10/12 7:56 am
VSG on 10/05/17
We all have our opinions for newbies on this forum.  We should not be advising them against the band or for the band we should be supporting them and giving them information that they can use to make a decision based on what is good for them.  Who said there was a 50% band failure where did you get that information?  If that was true the insurance company would not be paying for band surgery, period.  Doctors would not use it in their own bodies period!  It would be off the market period!   If you feel that strong about your band failures you should be picking Dr. offices and calling lawyers to save the world from the band!  Take your energy where it can help you and your friends that have had band problems.  I am not here to fight with you and when you ask questions like where are past members that have been banded are?  They are living their lives with the band if they no longer have the band like you want us to believe 50 percent of them don't, than why are they not on this forum complaining like the 3 or 4 people who have nothing to do all day,  but feed negativity to this board!  The older crowd does not want to hear it anymore they have lives to live!  This is the last energy I am going to waste on you band bashes, their I said it!  Again, I feel bad for anyone who has almost died from their bands but, you need to stop scaring everyone else to think it will happen any moment!!!!!!  Yes, people die everyday from overweight, RNY surgery, Sleeve Surgery, and even band surgery it is a fact of life!  I am not going to open or look at any of your feedback because quite frankly I am sick of your rants! So now you know why everybody is hiding.  They can't take anymore from the band bashes that's why!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
And, quite frankly I don't blame them!
Save your energy because I am not going to read any of your posts!  So post away!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 
I will be back in a couple of months hope this lap board gets better, and weeds out negativity for the newbies sake.  Now go ahead and save the world from the big bad BAND!

From one happy bandster,
Nance

Jo 1962
on 7/10/12 8:00 am - NearHouston, TX
 Good points, Nana.

   
5.0 cc in a 10cc lapband  (four  fills) 1 unfill of .5cc  on 5/24/2011.
.5 fill  March 2012. unfill of .25cc May 2012.  Unfill of .5cc June 2014.

Still with my lapband with no plans for revision. Band working well since

last small unfill.

HW: 267lbs- size 22-24  LW:194lbs  CW:198lbs  Size 14-16

 


 

Stephanie M.
on 7/10/12 9:07 am
 

 

  6-7-13 band removed. No revision. Facebook  Failed Lapbands and Realize Bands group and WLS-Support for Regain and Revision Group

              

Nic M
on 7/10/12 8:00 am
Someday you'll look back on this post and say, "oh ****"
Seriously, I could have written this post years ago. And then I found out the hard way what a bonehead I was.

 

 Avoid kemmerling, Green Bay, WI

 

Stephanie M.
on 7/10/12 8:08 am
 abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/lap-band-surgery-half-patients-complications/t/story


http://www.newsmaxhealth.com/health_stories/Lap_Band_Complications/2011/03/23/381629.html

Study Reveals Lap-Band Complications

Wednesday, March 23, 2011 7:07 AM

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An older kind of Lap-Band weight-loss surgery could lead to severe complications over the long haul, Belgian researchers said Monday.

 

The surgery works by placing a silicone band around the top portion of the stomach to restrict food intake. It has become an increasingly popular option in the battle against obesity, but some experts have worried about its safety.

 

The Belgian team found that as many as half their patients, followed for at least 12 years, needed to have the band removed in that period. And in more than a quarter, the band had gnawed its way through the wall of the stomach.

 

"The high failure rate of (Lap-Band surgery), at least in our hands, could be detrimental to its future continued widespread use as a restrictive weight-loss operation," Dr. Jacques Himpens of the Saint Pierre University Hospital in Brussels and colleagues write in the Archives of Surgery.

 

"This is what I was worried about," said Dr. Mary Brandt, who heads the pediatric surgical program at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston and has criticized the Lap-Band surgery before.

 

"I think these data support my opinion that lap band is not the right operation for adolescents," she told Reuters Health in an e-mail.

 

According to Allergan, the Irvine, California-based company that makes the Lap-Band system, its product has been used in more than 500,000 procedures worldwide. It commands more than two-thirds of a $300 million to $400 million market.

 

In an e-mail to Reuters Health, Allergan representatives criticized the new study and said both the surgical technique and the Lap-Band itself had changed in the interim.

 

It also noted that the study was based on only 151 patients from a single hospital, and that the researchers had only been able to test half of those patients.

 

"We are disappointed to see the publication of an ill-constructed, single-center clinical assessment that does not meet the high clinical standards one should expect from peer-reviewed data, and is not reflective of today's clinical standards," Cathy Taylor, Allergan's director of corporate communications, said.

 

Dr. Marc P. Michalsky, surgical director for the Center for Healthy Weight and Nutrition at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, seconded the criticism.

 

"In some ways it is a bit of a historic snapshot of this type of surgery 15 years ago," he said. "I would take these results with a grain of salt."

 

On average, the patients in the study lost about 43 percent of their excess weight — a number that was outpaced by the gold standard weight-loss surgery called gastric bypass.

 

Four out of every 10 patients in the study suffered a major complication of the surgery, such as the band going into the stomach or the stomach pouch enlarging. Overall, six in 10 patients ended up on the operating table again.

 

In 2009, more than 220,000 Americans had some type of weight-loss surgery, at a price of about $20,000 per patient, according to the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

 

"I don't think there's one operation that is good for everybody," Michalsky said. "It really boils down to a combination of considerations by the surgeon and the patient."

 

 

 

© 2011 Reuters. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.



Read more:
Study Reveals Lap-Band Complications

 

  6-7-13 band removed. No revision. Facebook  Failed Lapbands and Realize Bands group and WLS-Support for Regain and Revision Group

              

Stephanie M.
on 7/10/12 8:13 am, edited 7/10/12 8:19 am
NanaC, I actually haven't seen anyone rant on here about how their band has failed.  They've shared their own experiences...I provided two links for you to read.  I was just like you a year ago...thinking it was all BS, now I am having problems despite following the rules and keeping my band loose.  Pleas read with an open mind, so that if you start to develop problems, you will recognize them as possibly band related.
Steph

As far as I can see in the linked thread, no one is ranting 

http://www.obesityhelp.com/forums/lapband/4549137/Ready-for-Lap-Band/

 

  6-7-13 band removed. No revision. Facebook  Failed Lapbands and Realize Bands group and WLS-Support for Regain and Revision Group

              

Nic M
on 7/10/12 8:23 am
Ask and you shall receive:

Here's a link to ABC news talking about the failure rate of lapbands.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/lap-band-surgery-half- patients-complications/story?id=13187452













 

 Avoid kemmerling, Green Bay, WI

 

Stephanie M.
on 7/10/12 8:44 am
 ...one of the links I posted, great minds DO think alike!

 

  6-7-13 band removed. No revision. Facebook  Failed Lapbands and Realize Bands group and WLS-Support for Regain and Revision Group

              

Nic M
on 7/10/12 9:02 am
I  didn't read through all the reponses before posting... but it's good info... and should be posted twice, anyhoo!! 

 

 Avoid kemmerling, Green Bay, WI

 

MARIA F.
on 7/10/12 8:29 am - Athens, GA

~ Who said there was a 50% band failure where did you get that information?~

The government say it:

Allergan Receives U.S. Subpoena Over Weight Loss Device

 

Allergan Inc. (AGN), the maker of the wrinkle treatment Botox, received a U.S. government subpoena over its gastric banding device for obesity.

Allergan received the subpoena from the Department of Health and Human Services’s Inspector General this month, the company reported today in a filing. Bonnie Jacobs, a spokeswoman for Irvine, California-based Allergan, acknowledged the subpoena but declined to comment further.

In January, House Democratic lawmakers called for hearings on medical devices including Lap-Band, following a study in the medical journal Archives of Surgery, that found almost half of patients with a gastric band had no weight loss or needed the device removed after six years. More than 40 percent had long- term complications.

The Food and Drug Administration approved the device in 2001 for patients who were at least 100 pounds (45 kilograms) overweight, had a body mass index of at least 40, or an index of 35 with obesity-related conditions such as heart problems. Allergan gained clearance in February 2011 to expand marketing of the device to people with lower body mass indexes and at least one obesity-related condition.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ryan Flinn in San Francisco at [email protected]


 

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