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I had gastric bypass surgery in 2005 and went from 244 pounds to 160 pounds. Now it's 2013 and I back up to 185 pounds. I still cannot eat alot and I don't eat junk. I exercise 4 days a week. All my blood work has been good, bloodpressure good, off diabetes and cholesteral meds. I'm very discouraged. I'm not sure this is the right place to ask this, because I didn't have a mini gastric bypass. I've never heard of it before.
Hi Julie,
That's exactly what I meant. The MGB surgeon should be in the spot light as not being qualified to do it.
I think you misunderstood what happened. The new surgeon was great. The MGB surgeon messed everything up.
I'm so sorry you had to go through that. The surgeon never should have attempted it on you. Why did he think he was qualified to do it? Did you sew for malpractice? I can see how you would blame the MGB but I think I would go after the surgeon for doing such a crappy job and making you so miserable.
I hope things calm down for you soon and you can have a quality life.
“You want to do more, be more, but you are waiting until you feel more prepared. Here's how to gear up.”
Okay, sorry but sitting out in life isn't going to cut it. Sure, you could wait until you are completely on top of your game in life (whatever that means to you). Or, you could start living it now. What do you want to do? If you feel your weight, or your age, or your personality is holding you back, it is. If you feel nothing can hold you back from your dreams, then they won't. Abraham Lincoln once said, "Always bear in mind that your resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing." If you decide to succeed, and actually move toward that success, you will either succeed or be able to know why you didn't, instead of wondering if you could've or just writing off that you can't.
I am two weeks post-op my revision from MGB to RNY. For some reason, I developed a stricture six years after my MGB. They're still unsure as to why, but the only thing they think could have happened is the bile reflux continually aggravated the opening between the stomach and intestines causing the connection to scar shut. After eight months of continuing vomiting, six scopes with dilation, and rapid weight loss, I contacted a local surgeon. He advised I convert to the RNY to get the bile to drain properly. I consented to the surgery and am hoping it will fix the problem.
When I contacted Dr. Rutledge, he insisted I have an ulcer, but after six scopes, no ulcer has been seen and nothing was seen during the conversion surgery either, so I do not think that is the issue. What they did find when they did the RNY is the doctor who performed my MGB did not properly form the new stomach. In fact, it was not even close to what the diagram shows should be done. It was huge on top. He did not staple all the way up and left the old stomach attached to the new one. I'm unsure if that has anything to do with the stricture, but I can say I am very unhappy that it was not performed correctly and my new surgeon was at a loss as to why any surgeon would do that to someone. I will also say that finding help locally after having the MGB is very difficult to do. Not many doctors are comfortable treating an MGB patient because they are not familiar with the surgery. I had to be completely malnourished and very, very sick before my surgeon would agree to treat me and he only agreed to after my GI doctor pleaded my case to him. I thank my lucky stars he did, because I had lost 30 pounds when I was already at goal weight. I've since lost another 10 pounds because I can only eat 2 ounces until my new pouch heals. I hope I can start putting the weight back on because I feel emaciated and unhealthy, but I just know it's going to get better.
Anyways, I used to gladly recommend the MGB, but after my experiences over the past eight months, I don't think I can do that any longer. The doctor who did my MGB isn't even performing them anymore and has moved to another state, so I essentially was left on my own to find someone to help. Also, my family doctor retired, so even though she had agreed to follow me for my post-MGB care, she left and my new doctor didn't feel comfortable being the primary care giver for a gastric bypass patient. I do personally know several people who have had great outcomes from the MGB, so do your research and know that NO gastric bypass surgery is without risk and even though the MGB doctors tout it's easily reversible, it is STILL a major operation. Mine took three hours, I ended up having a heart attack during it, and half my spleen died. I also had to be hospitalized for nine days following it. So while it can be reversed, revised, whatever, it is risky just like any other gastric bypass revision.
“You want to eat healthier, but it's such a chore. Here's how to clean up.”
If you've said (probably in a whiny voice), "Eating healthy is more expensive," or "My family doesn't like eating that stuff," or even, "I don't know what to make that's healthy," you are not alone. All of those statements SEEM true, until you overcome them. You are probably just not USED to thinking that way. Start by trying one healthy recipe each week. Yes, there will be some that you or your family doesn't like. You've probably tried new, unhealthy recipes that they didn't like from time to time too. It's okay. Chuck it and try again. There are plenty of very good recipes that will be successes. You may believe that healthy foods are expensive. Depending when produce is in season, and your location, prices will fluctuate. But you can usually work around these issues. You might feel your grocery bill is higher too, if you are buying fresh ingredients in ADDITION to what you normally buy. Once you start REPLACING the processed, pre-packaged foods (and probably a few trips through the drive thru), you'll see that eating well is healthy for your pocketbook too.
“You want to feel inspired, but there's de-motivation at every turn. Here's how to run it off the road.”
Television, family members, so-called friends, magazine ads, a look in the mirror. There are plenty of things that make us feel bad about ourselves. Things that make us doubt that we'll ever succeed at our goals. So, what are we going to do about them? Eleanor Roosevelt had a great quote, "In the long run, we shape our lives, and we shape ourselves. The process never ends until we die. And the choices we make are ultimately our own responsibility." We know outside influences will occasionally bring us down, so how do we spring back up? What motivates you? Music? A particular movie? Thinking about God? Standing in the sunshine? Reading uplifting quotes? Exercising? Find what motivates you and keep your goals on the road to success.