Guest guest Posted July 4, 2002 Report Share Posted July 4, 2002 > Subject: Muscle Soreness >>>I had surgery on May 15, 2001, Open RNY 250 cm bypassed. I have been doing pretty good until recently I have sore muscles. Not just every now and then but constantly.<<< Hi Robin, Obviously, first things first -- what has your MD said about it? Are you taking any medications where " muscle soreness " is a side effect of the medication (many do have that...) If all medically cleared then I'd look to what " fuel " are you feeding your muscles? Muscles are made up of protein (so are most of our organs... deep soreness) are you feeding your body enough protein in an absorbable form to feed your muscles and organs? Are your supplements complementing your pre-digested protein so that you are getting the maximum value from your protein and your vitamins? Do your nails and hair look healthy? How is your skin? (external protein built components are often a good measure of how things are going on inside us...) How is your energy level? Once we've reached or neared our goal weights -- a " very general " rule of thumb is 1 gram of protein for 1 pound of weight... minimum -- we can digest up to 30 grams per serving of a highly bio-available pre-digested protein -- each of us is very different so it is really impossible to know how much each of us needs or absorbs at one time... so that is just a very general guideline to us. So, if your body weight is 120 lbs - 120 grams of protein a day would support your existing muscle mass with a bit left over for " fuel " -- if your exercising regularly then your body will need more fuel to do that so, adjusting up to the level of " fuel " = " burn " is what I've found works for me. While most surgeons still disagree with this -- what I " see " going on in the world of long term post ops (3, 5, 8, 12 years out) who have stayed thin and healthy is that they follow that general line of thought -- it works for me -- I'm more of a " visual " person though so I " look " towards the winners -- those who have had a healthy weight loss, health gain, and have maintained it for years and years -- then ask " what " they do and " how " they do it -- and that is the standard answer I get from them. STILL... and above all... check with your doctor to make sure that a medical issue isn't what is causing the pain first -- that is most important... to not over look the medical issues we have, get checked out first... if all is ok in that area then look at what " fuel " you are providing for your body. hugz 'n let us know how that all goes, ~denise Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.