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mistysj

Gastric Bypass Patients
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Everything posted by mistysj

  1. mistysj

    Enabling

    I reported her for spreading lies. I'm worried about the people she is influencing, especially pre-ops. It's very dangerous IMHO.
  2. And staples don't make you vomit. Eating too much food for your anatomy makes you vomit.
  3. Butter, you did say you don't have staples, right? If so, it seems like NaNa knows more about your surgery than you do.
  4. Butterthebean, a well-respected sleever with 18 months of the sleeved life, has already told you on another thread that his sleeve was sutured and not stapled. And just because your sister had part of her stomach removed does not mean she had a sleeve. First, she must still have a great deal of fundus tissue if she was actually able to stretch her stomach. There is no reason to assume that the ulcers were in the fundus or that the surgery she had created a thin tube-shaped stomach. So she had an altered stomach but not a gastric sleeve. You actually seem quite fuzzy on what your sister ended up with, which is completely understandable because you aren't her doctor. It also doesn't seem like she is complying with the protocol for the procedure or that she is particularly eager to get the facts. Of course vomiting to the point of tooth damage is not healthy and it's not caused by staples. That is a symptom of bulimia and I pray that your sister seeks help, whether the vomiting is from physical reasons or other reasons. I haven't seen any sleevers misrepresenting the band, but you continue to spread misinformation about the sleeve. I'm sure you mean well, but please consider your "facts" about the sleeve, RNY, or other procedure you haven't had, before you state falsehoods as facts. People are here to find out about all the options and make educated decisions. Spreading misinformation could cause someone to have a procedure that they are not happy with in the long run. If you do want to learn more about the sleeve or RNY I highly recommend the books written by Alex Brecher, who founded this site. Alex is a band patient who had given excellent and objective information about all of the bariatric procedures.
  5. mistysj

    How Many Days/nights In Hospital?

    Two nights for me. I could have gone home after the first night because I was already managing the pain without anythi stronger than Tylenol and I had already passed urine, but my surgeon is on the conservative side.
  6. mistysj

    400's 300's

    Yep! Look for posts by BigFrank. Also there are forums for support groups by amount to lose, just like there are for region and surgery type. You might also look for 50+ BMI as well as there will probably be a significant overlap. VSG is not only a standalone surgery, but can also be the first part of a two-step surgery called the duodenal switch (DS), which is specifically aimed at people with a very high BMI.
  7. Surgery went fine and I'm all good.
  8. Out of surgery and all good. Thanks for the good thoughts, everyone!
  9. mistysj

    Enabling

    I'm doing fine everyone. Thanks for the good juju!
  10. 6 months ago. Not a single problem and I'm down 65 lbs.
  11. Oh and hypoglycemia and dumping are completely different things. Hypoglycemia is low blood sugar. It is related to diabetes. Dumping is a symptom of partially undigested food entering the intestine. It has to so with faster transit time between the stomach and intestines. It is rare. Very few RNY patients dump, and a vanishingly small number of Sleevers do.
  12. Stomach stapling is. It the same as the sleeve or bypass. Stomach stapling is a very old bariatric surgery that is not performed anymore. Staples in and of themselves are not the problem. For the sleeve, some surgeons don't even use staples. Some use dissolvable sutures. Some use staples for the initial closure, but suture over the staple line, completely covering it. This is to protect against leaks for the first 6-8 weeks until the suture line is totally healed. This is bet sleeve patients have a graduated diet from liquid back to solid, and this is why the (very small) risk of leaks goes down to nearly zero at the 6-week mark. Please don't mix up your bariatric procedures when you are making decisions regarding surgery. You need all the facts.
  13. mistysj

    Problems Posting ...?

    Alex, several of us have seen this with the app (I'm on iOS and have seen it with the iPhone and iPad). It looks like the post is going to time out. If you wait for it to actually time out (takes a couple minutes) it has usually posted the same thing 2-3 times. It's the callback routine that isn't working right. This doesn't happen all the time but has happened to me on wifi and 3G. I assume it's the same thing the OP is experiencing.
  14. In my opinion, the sleeve is the "cleanest". Nothing left behind, no major anatomical changes. Just less capacity. No limitation on what meds you can take later and your whole GI tract can be examined. No risk of scarring, slipping or port infection. And the sleeve is based on a surgical procedure, gastrectomy, that has been around and used for more than 50 years. (Maybe much longer, in fact). But all surgeries (even non-WLS ones) have risks. Weigh that with the fact that in the general population, people with problems are going to be the ones who are more vocal on the Internet and elsewhere. That's why you shouldn't only rely on personal anecdotes or stories about a friend of a friend, but actually read the research and the literature that is available from scientific and medical journals, read books, and talk to your surgeon. Even (especially?) on this website, there is a great amount of good info, along with a huge amount of rumor, speculation, and false misleading information, about each one of the surgeries. Alex, the founder of this site, has published informational books about the gastric sleeve, lap band, and RNY. Maybe more. They are available from amazon.com, as well as tons of other booms about bariatric surgery. I recommend reading them. Before you buy a book look at the publication date because books that are more than 5 years old will be less useful. And what matters the absolute most is the path you take after surgery, after the gradual reintroduction of food. At that point, our journeys become remarkably similar. We all need to eat high Protein, low carb healthy foods. We all need to drink enough Water. We all need to exercise. All of our procedures help us limit our intake. All procedures can he successful and all procedures can fail, because the procedure doesn't do all the work. You do. I think Alex combined the sites to show us all our similarities.
  15. mistysj

    Enabling

    And now that I've spewed enough psychobabble for the day, I'll go and get ready to have my fucked gallbladder removed in a couple of hours! Please say a prayer or chant a mantra or sacrifice a goat that this stops the 6-month run of the runs, or at the very least, that I never have a 14-hour gallstone attack again.
  16. mistysj

    Enabling

    I "liked" your post because you are overcoming things. Let me tell you, you don't have bad habits and you aren't bad. You have coping strategies that are out of date for your current life. You are finding new, more appropriate ones.
  17. mistysj

    Enabling

    Thank you for the courage it took you to share that. Facing your reality is such a big step.
  18. mistysj

    Enabling

    Damn double post
  19. mistysj

    Enabling

    Double post
  20. mistysj

    Enabling

    Thank you so much for that support. You are not alone. And we are so strong.
  21. mistysj

    Enabling

    I was/am a big-time closet eater. I'm the one who nobody can figure out why I was fat because they never saw me eat. I'd open a package and eat the whole thing so I could toss the bag and hide the evidence. I'd eat a whole pizza or a whole pie or 6 cupcakes or a pint (or a quart) of ice cream. The worst was when I was all alone, in my dorm room or after I got married, when my husband was away for the day or (much worse) traveling for work for a few days. I'd eat the whole time. I may nit have finished it all in a sitting but I'd get it done. I used to go to mcdonalds and order: 1 quarter pounder meal, large, and 1 double cheeseburger. The quarter pounder just wasn't enough! But I was in huge denial especially to my husband, who had no idea about my binges. I lost weight on programs like Weight Watchers, but my food journals never showed my binges. They showed me eating perfectly. It was an exercise in self-delusion. I know why I did it and I've had lots of therapy. I was a physically and sexually abused child and food was a comfort as a kid. Also my parents had me on diets from a very young age (and I wasn't even fat) and my bone-thin brother was allowed (even forced, also abusively) to eat to the point of vomiting. He got pop tarts for Breakfast and I got fruit. Of course I snuck treats into my room and ate them in the middle of the night. Of course I binged when I went to friends' houses, or on birthdays/holidays/special occasions when I was allowed to eat as much as I could hold. On pizza nights my brother and I were praised for how many pieces of pizza we could get down. Then I was put into foster care at age 12. Age 14 my foster parents decided we were all vegetarian. Loss of choice around food again. I ate meat and junk whenever I could get it. They also sent me signals that I was fat and limited my food. I was in so much pain and turmoil and food was the only thing I felt like I was choosing in my life. I'm an adult now and I have control of all my choices. Knowing this wasn't enough to break the cycle. Therapy helped me understand but didn't break my food patterns. The sleeve has (so far) been that extra push and given me that control. It has also been enough of a disruption to give me a chance to think and to breathe. I have been working on myself, hard, since before surgery, knowing that there will come a time (probably soon) when the restriction doesn't keep me on the straight and narrow anymore. I've already done food misdeeds in small ways and I can feel that it would be so easy to go for the sliders to feel that temporary comfort. I'm well aware of my issues. Thanks for this thread. It's important to check in with the demons and look them in the eye on a regular basis.
  22. mistysj

    Enabling

    Nauseous means "sickening" or "disgusting" as in "that huge pile of vomit on the sidewalk is nauseous," Nauseating means "making you feel like vomiting" as in "that vomit is nauseating to me." http://www.grammarerrors.com/word-choice/nauseousnauseated/
  23. The last couple runs have been a lot better. The 1% incline feels good and I've shortened my stride I think. I feel good after 7 km. I haven't been able to make myself run further than that since I finished the Couch to 10k. I just don't feel like I need to run longer than 50 minutes at a shot for exercise. Gallbladder surgery tomorrow so yesterday was probably my last run for the next week or two.
  24. mistysj

    Enabling

    Fluffster, has your husband considered self-pay in Mexico?

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