Question:
Help!! :0(
I am going back to see my original surgeon on July 11th. He wanted me to lose 30 lbs prior to surgery. But I havent lose ANYTHING! Is there anyway I can lose SOME weight by July so he can atleast see that I am trying?? I just fear that if I dont lose the weight he wont do the surgery until I do, even though I have everything else he wanted me to have done, done. Any help will be GREATLY appreciated. — Shavonne P. (posted on May 30, 2002)
May 30, 2002
The Atkins diet is the quickest way to take off weight IMHO. You could
take off 20 or more lbs by then if you follow it religiously. It's the
only thing I'd recommend, as you can eat a lot of food so you're not
hungry. It's just that the foods you eat get old *fast*. Good luck!
— GGinMA
May 30, 2002
I think it's such a hoot when doctors want patients to take off ____ number
of pounds before their surgeries! If I could take off 30 lbs. I would have
done so a LONG time ago. I don't imagine your doctor will cancel your
surgery, as long as you tell him you've really been trying. Mostly, he is
probably concerned about you having a "fatty liver" which can
complicate surgery.
— Terissa R.
May 30, 2002
I disagree and agree with the previous poster. I do beleive it is an odd
request for a surgeon to make, although I do see it on here from time to
time. I believe they've got there reasons, and fatty livers and other
health issues are probably them. But, I don't truly believe that most of
us have that much difficulty losing 20 or 30 pounds. If I haven't done it
once, I haven't done it a hundred times. It's keeping the 30 off, or it's
losing 100, 125, 150 pounds that seems to be trouble. Most diets I have
ever been on I've lost around 20-25 pounds the first month, so it shouldn't
be that rough. It sucks, I know...who wants to go on ANOTHER diet right
before surgery when all you want to do is eat. But, if you've got to do it
to have the surgery, then do it. It'll be worth it in the long run. Cut
out carbs, if you are physically able to exercise, try to walk for at least
twenty minutes a day, quit snacking, eat low fat - low sugar, drink tons of
water...you know, diet. Ugh, I hate that word. I hope it all works out
for you. Best of Luck! ~Paula
— PaulaM
May 30, 2002
Before anyone says "if I could do that I wouldn't have needed
surgery", let me add this: Keep in mind you only have to do this for
one month. Anybody with even the littlest of willpower can do it for ONE
month. And, every time you get down, just keep saying to yourself
"one month till surgery, that's all I've got, is one month until
surgery..." :)
— PaulaM
May 30, 2002
I agree with some of the other posters that it is a crock, in my
opinion...everyone hear that (IN MY OPINION <so I don't get bombarded
with hate-mail..haha). Anyway - I don't get what the point is with it all
- to have to prove a point prior to surgery by losing "x" amount
of weight? Give me a break. As if most of us haven't tried hundreds upon
hundreds of diets and most of have have lost hundreds and hundreds of
pounds only to gain them back and then some. I sure as heck wouldn't get
discouraged about losing - if it was me, I'd be looking for another doc.
Again - this is only my opinion. I'd be curious to know how many doctors
asked their patients to lose weight prior to a surgery. I've certainly
heard from quite a few people on the message boards or question/answer
section but I believe there are more who truly understand where we are with
things in life. Good luck to you, friend ~ I hope all goes well for you.
— Lisa J.
May 30, 2002
My answer/comment didn't come all the way through. Let's try this again -
I believe it's somewhat of a crock that the doctors or surgeons (some) are
asking their patients to lose "x" amount of weight. Most of us
have tried hundred upon hundreds of diets and we've been successful but
once off, only to gain hundreds upon hundreds (and then some) back again.
And this is ONLY MY OPINION so please don't bash me with 'hate' mail,
readers - I'm just voicing my opinion. If my doctor would have told me I
needed to lose weight prior to him accepting me as my patient, I would have
told that doctor he wasn't the right doctor for me. After months and
months of trials and tribulations and the emotional roller coaster all of
this procedure brings, the last thing on my mind would want to be trying to
figure out a way to lose the weight I needed to just to be accepted in
his/her care. I wish you the best of luck though, if you choose to
continue to try and lose it - I can guarantee you this, it will not be
NEARLY as hard once you've had the surgery. You'll lose successfully like
crazy - you'll get there. Hang in there, friend.
— Lisa J.
May 30, 2002
I agree with the crock statement, my Doctor also agrees, He says why make
you lose weight before surgery , you have done it dozens of times.
My thought on this, is that some doctors are forcing
patients to do unhealthy things to their bodies rather it is laxitives or
diretcs, or just plain starving oneself to lose weight before surgery, I
cannot understand this train of thought at all.
Now I am off my soap box......... please just eat healthy and do not do
anything that can jepordize your health before surgery.
— Jeri P.
May 30, 2002
looks like I needed spell check on my last post LOL
— Jeri P.
May 30, 2002
My surgeon asks his patients to lose 10 pounds before surgery. I have found
out that this is because he wants to see for himself that you can follow a
structured plan. He even has the dietician give you the step-by-step,
balanced "plan" to acheive the 10 pound loss. The 10 lbs he asks
you to lose is at the first consultaion. He wants you to lose them by
surgery date. For me, that was three months. I think it was more than
fair. 30lbs sounds like too much. That is not just showing effort at
sticking to a plan...that is a full-blown "diet". Just my
opinion.
— Sandra C.
May 30, 2002
Just go back for your appt and let him know you HAVE been trying and no
results. Make it work to your advantage and say "See, Doc, no matter
how I try I fighting a losing battle". All the more reason for the
surgery. After you have the surgery, you won't have any choice. I gained
18 lbs. in between my last consult and my surgery date.....lots of last
meals. I wish I hadn't done that because, as it turns out, those are going
to be the hardest 18 lbs. to lose in the long run.
— Annie H.
May 30, 2002
One of the great things about having a surgery practice where the doc has
had wls himself, is that you are never asked to do the impossible. Your
surgeon wants an event free surgery, but he just doesn't understand Morbid
Obesity.
— faybay
May 31, 2002
My Doc did not require it but he asked that you try to eat healthy as
possible. The reason is because you liver gets all the fat and when he
does it LAP he has to move the liver to go by it. He said this is easier
if it is't full of fat. I may not have it perfectly correct but that is my
understanding of it. To make the surgery a little easier....30 seems a bit
much to ask of anyone!
— Sharon F.
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