I think I have made a revision decision...lol
Personal attacks are not allowed pursuant to our Terms of Service.
Personal attacks include, but are not limited to, name-calling, being hateful, threatening, harassing, insulting, malicious orattacking a member personally rather than challenging a member's views or position in an appropriate and respectful way. Please keep comments on the subject, not on a person.
We appreciate your anticipated cooperation as an ObesityHelp member.
Thank you,
Member Services
One of the biggest reasons I have decided to go after RNY is because the DS as a two stage procedure, with the switch occurring a long time after the sleeve, doesn' t have good results for the dramatic amount of weight loss that I need to occur. As I have stated before, I have no idea what is going on inside my guts. Until I get some honest to goodness medical intervention I don't know what will happen. I have made a decision as to what surgery I want. Until I am evaluated by the surgeon, that's the way I want to go. He made counsel me against this and help me make a different choice. That will remain to be seen.
I am just over four years out from the sleeve. I wanted an RNY to begin with. But when I got down to brass tacks, I went with the option available to me-a sleeve. It was what I could afford, it had good results and I didn't want a band which was my only other alternative. It was a monetary decision based on my needs and what I could afford.
I am my own health care advocate. You don't have as many health issues-including not one but TWO autoimmune diseases-as I do and let the health care professionals walk all over you and dictate your care. That is bull**** I interact with my doctors and if they won't work with me, I find another. Believe me, I will not allow for choices to be made that I am not in agreement with.
I need restriction as well as malabsorbtion. Unless I can be re-sleeved or some other restrictive option, I don't want a bypass procedure that will not do much for me.
But of course, I will wait for some medical opinions and results of tests before I schedule a surgery date.
VSG TO DS Revision on June 8, 2017.
Surgeon: Dr. Philip Schauer at Cleveland Clinic
Current Weight: 280 lbs
Regained to: 312lbs
Lowest after VSG: 249lbs
Highest Weight ever: 330lbs
You may not experience the results you hope to with a RNY revision either. It's pretty standard that revisions lose slower (and maybe not as much as a virgin surgery) no matter what revised to.
Proximal RNY Lap - 02/21/05
9 years committed ~ 100% EWL and Maintaining
www.dazzlinglashesandbeyond.com
And, yeah, I shouldn't have cursed and I did delete that post. I left the other forum and yet she followed and started up. Funny how I am called a trouble maker but I left and still the haters find a way to continue their onslaught.
VSG TO DS Revision on June 8, 2017.
Surgeon: Dr. Philip Schauer at Cleveland Clinic
Current Weight: 280 lbs
Regained to: 312lbs
Lowest after VSG: 249lbs
Highest Weight ever: 330lbs
I don't want to engage with anyone reguarding this any longer. I am blocking left and right and would encourage others to do the same for me.
VSG TO DS Revision on June 8, 2017.
Surgeon: Dr. Philip Schauer at Cleveland Clinic
Current Weight: 280 lbs
Regained to: 312lbs
Lowest after VSG: 249lbs
Highest Weight ever: 330lbs
Join me here: weightlosssurgery.proboards.com/
And, yeah, I shouldn't have cursed and I did delete that post. I left the other forum and yet she followed and started up. Funny how I am called a trouble maker but I left and still the haters find a way to continue their onslaught.
RNY to DS Revision 4/29/2011
Dr. Henry Buchwald
"Think twice.....Cut ONCE"
That is where I have confliciting information. I have been reading like a maniac and what I see says that if they re-sleeve me, it may cause problems with stomach elasticity-something to the effect of a balloon that has been blown up too much and is thinned out and unstable. Not the best analogy, but I am at work and don't have my research file available.
If I could be safely re-sleeved, and safely switched, that could be a potential revision idea.
Thanks!
VSG TO DS Revision on June 8, 2017.
Surgeon: Dr. Philip Schauer at Cleveland Clinic
Current Weight: 280 lbs
Regained to: 312lbs
Lowest after VSG: 249lbs
Highest Weight ever: 330lbs