losing weight with or without wls

new_style27101
on 8/17/09 12:17 pm - winston salem, NC
This may sound like a stupid question but could someone explain to me how wls helps you loose weight rather than losing it on your on. I guess I am scared that I have the surgery and it still does'nt work. I have tried a lot of diets already. thanks in advance
jimfll
on 8/17/09 12:23 pm
It limits what you can eat even if you want to eat more. I have tried every diet and never kept weight off. * months after surgery I am down 151 lbs. You need to workout and watch your diet but it is a lot easier than without surgery. My only regret is not doing it 5 years ago.
Good Luck.
Brandi D
on 8/20/09 1:26 pm
Also surgeries like the VSG and the DS take out the left side of the stomach completely that overproduces ghrelin.. and helps contribute to your higher testosterone levels.. which leads to your increase in belly fat..

The higher testosterone levels make you crave carbs more.. and changes how your body digests those carbs..

 "If women didn't exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning." ~Aristotle Onassis
Fo' Shizzle My Sizzle
on 11/2/09 10:53 pm, edited 11/2/09 10:55 pm

On August 20, 2009 at 8:26 PM Pacific Time, BrandiDaryl wrote: A"lso surgeries like the VSG and the DS take out the left side of the stomach completely that overproduces ghrelin.. and helps contribute to your higher testosterone levels.. which leads to your increase in belly fat..

The higher testosterone levels make you crave carbs more.. and changes how your body digests those carbs.."

 

Brandi:

This is the first time I've heard of a grhelin connection with testosterone. Would you happen to be able to point me to some research on it? Thanks!

to the OP:

Well, like most members here I too have tried the diet route. The only one that worked for me was a 1200 cal/day low carb diet + ultrameal for breakfast under the supervision of a nutritionist, but I was only able to loose 40lbs when I hit a 5 month wall/plateu. It is very difficult to stick to a diet when you're battling hunger all the time, and you don't have the weight loss to motivate you. I've also tried caloric restriction with tenuate (under doctor's supervision) and byetta to help regulate the insulin response a bit better, but I only had a 15lb loss and the byetta made me feel sick every time I ate. Not fun!

I'd imagine surgery makea caloric restriction easier since it addresses hunger and you don't need perscription meds to keep the appetitie in check which means no nasty side effects from medication. Also the DS works well to reverse type II diabetes in most, and that indicaties there's something about the small intestine that contributes to insulin regulation- something medical science hasn't figured out yet. There's a great deal about metabolism, weight gain and weight loss that medical science just doesn't know yet, it would be nice if doctors weren't so quick to blame the patients.

Brandi D
on 11/3/09 5:52 am
Nope.. everything I know about it I've just had doctors tell me... Dr. Allon was my PCOS endo.. then the doctors Davis touched on it when I asked questions during the seminar...

it's not necessarily the ghrelin itself.. but it's the other additives that are produced on that side of the stomach too.. that cause Syndrome X.. which is insulin resistance.. which makes you crave more carbs.. and the more carbs you crave.. the more you eat.. the more glucose floods your body.. and the testosterone spikes..

That's just how my endo described it...

I wouldn't know what medical terms to use to search for the research specifically.. but I do know that since having the VSG and going so low carb...  I've lost maybe 9-10 inches in the waist...

 "If women didn't exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning." ~Aristotle Onassis
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