Question:
WHAT, EXACTLY, IS THE COTTAGE CHEESE TESt
What is the cottage cheese test and can it be done with anything else besides cottage cheese? I hate cottage cheese. — Peggy D. (posted on August 6, 2002)
August 6, 2002
Excellent question Peggy! I hate that stuff too.
— Amber L.
August 6, 2002
You can find info on the cottage cheese test (and lots of other good info)
at the "Pouch Rules for Dummies" site:
http://www.shelby.net/wizards/larger.htm - Anna LAP RNY 7/3/02 -45lbs.
— Anna L.
August 6, 2002
How big is my stomach pouch? Just about every patient asks this question on
occasion. It is expected and appropriate that the stomach pouch will
enlarge somewhat as the months pass after gastric bypass. Some of this
enlargement is an actual increase in size, and some represents a softening
(regaining of elasticity) of the pouch and its outlet.
The real answer is that the FUNCTIONAL size varies with many factors such
as time of day, the amount of time taken to eat, mood of the patient, other
medical issues, and (most importantly) the type of food eaten. It is
expected and appropriate that the pouch will handle a much smaller amount
of solid food (chicken) than mushy stuff like mashed potatoes or soup.
The cottage cheese test is a technique that was presented at the June 2000
meeting of the ASBS (and many times before that) by Latham Flanagan, MD
(website is at The Oregon Center for Bariatric Surgery). It is meant to be
a standardized, reproducible measurement of the physical size of the
stomach pouch in a person who has undergone a gastric bypass procedure.
Purchase a container of small curd low-fat cottage cheese. Begin the test
with a full container, and perform the test in the morning before eating
anything else (this will be your breakfast on that day). Eat fairly quickly
until you feel full (less than five minutes). Note that the small soft
curds do not require much chewing. The idea with the rapid eating is to
fill the pouch before there is much time for food to flow out of it.
After eating your "fill" of cottage cheese, you will be left
with a partially eaten container that has empty space where cottage cheese
used to be.
Start with a measured amount of water (16 ounces, for example), and pour
water into the container of cottage cheese until the water is level with
the original top level of the cottage cheese.
Voila - the amount of water poured into the container is the functional
size of the pouch.
If this is your first time doing the test - DON'T PANIC. You are likely to
find that the "cottage cheese" size of your pouch is way bigger
than your surgeon told you he/she made it at the time of surgery. Dr.
Flanagan's data indicates that the average size of the mature pouch by
cottage cheese test is 5.5 ounces. He has also found that sizes ranging
from 3 to 9 ounces have NO IMPACT on the person's success in weight loss.
This page was last updated on: 11/07/00
— Barbara B.
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