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Carbonation & sugar to name a couple

Great time to contact your nutritionist and get a real clearcut understanding of permissible items and the rationale.

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Try for example:

- unsweetened iced green tea from Trader Joe's or Pure Leaf

- bulk spring Water in a pitcher with thin-sliced lemon or lime and left to steep in the fridge for at least a couple of hours

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Well I don't believe it's forever but talk to your nutritionist.

It's definately a no no while you are healing. Several months out I was drinking small cups of diet soda. A few sips make me feel super full but then I burp and feel much better LOL

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The carbonation and the sugar. In theory diet sodas should be fine if your plan allows other sugar free artificially sweetened drinks. The carbonation can be irritating to some sleeves, so check with your surgeon or NUT for their opinion on it. My instructions where to avoid it for the first few months.

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It doesn't have to be forever.

I would definitely stay away from sodas containing sugar so you don't drink your calories.

There are a lot of additives to soda, colas can be acidic as do many sodas have caffeine (which you should consume in moderation).

Water is what nuts recommend, but there are ways to flavor it with little or no calories.

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I don't think there's many nutritionists out there who will ever tell you it's "good" or "permissible" on their plan and if they did, I would be a bit concerned of that by itself, since it's nothing more than poison in a can (my opinion).

Having said that, I don't think anything is a "must stay away from forever" for reasons of possible complications more than for reasons of health. It's simply unhealthy and I think that's the biggest reason to stay away from it, but obviously in time your ability to drink it will depend on your specific situation and sleeve reaction.

I think in the beginning, when you're still healing, there are a lot of people who experience pain or discomfort because of the carbonation. That gas can cause pressure in your new sleeve which can certainly be painful. As far as sugar is concerned, any sugar in liquid form can cause some discomfort, or even symptoms that mimic "dumping syndrome" common in bypass patients.

Do I think some soda now and again down the road is the worst thing in the world? No. Of course not. But knowing my personality, I think if I even let it in a little, then I'll justify a little more....then a little more....then other things, and I just don't want to go down that path.

What I (my opinion only) do think is important is that you use the time post-op (especially the first year) to re-train yourself on healthy eating and making better food choices. That's what I've chosen to do and, unfortunately, soda (regular, diet or other), doesn't fit into that plan.

Best of luck!

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There seems to be a lot of controversy around this topic. I like an occasional soda Water with a bit of cordial (not the coke, Sprite etc canned drinks). My surgeon has no issue with this and said no scientific evidence to show carbonated drinks can stretch the stomach.

Sent from my iPad using the BariatricPal App

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I do not drink soda and have not for years but what I was told that that recent studies indicate that carbonated drinks contribute to stomach stretching. This is the primary reason my plan says to avoid it.

Sent from my SM-G925V using the BariatricPal App

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Ginger ale, no

Sparkling Water, no

If you really need to, then Mountain Dew is allowed

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Your stomach will explode .... Just kidding lol but it will surely stretch it & all the sugar will put you on the fast track in the wrong direction.

Sent from my iPhone using the BariatricPal App

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We debated this one a while back. Sugar drinks are bad because they have tons of calories and go down without restriction.

Carbonated beverages are off limits while healing due to acid and expansion.

Carbonated sugar free beverages are okay once you're fully healed (3/6 months out).

I challenged everyone who said "never for life" to produce one credible source and no one did!

That said, you do get filled up quickly, so you won't be drinking too much...

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