Guest guest Posted November 9, 2002 Report Share Posted November 9, 2002 Hi everyone: This also is a post to people discussing whether GB is high risk or not. I have seen elsewhere earlier this year, that there seem to be a creeping impression by some that it is not high risk. I have seen it relayed to pre-ops in this manner. I wanted to try to respond. I still can't spell ; I thought gb was supposed to fix stuff (grin) love, ceep This is just in response to comments about gastric bypass surgery maybe not really being 'high risk. " These are just my two cent's worth only: Gastric Bypass surgery IS high risk. I know there are pre-ops who lurk here; And I just want to say, again, only my opinion: Let no one lead you astray. Get all the information you can, mainly from docs who have done thousands of these surgeries, and from post-ops who are more than two years out. They are the ones who will have the most current and useful info, the former, about the surgery itself and its predicted outcomes; the latter, about the ACTUAL outcomes, and how to truly take care of yourself after the initial honeymoon period, when it is less " happy dance time " and far more gritty, day to day life striving-- I might add, having a community of others who understand and care about the long term issues of the post-bypass life is invaluable. In my humble opinion, you do not have this surgery and then go on your merry way. You belong to a group now of brave souls, an inner circle that strives to understand in ways those who have not undergone this kind of life, both pre and post op, often cannot quite appreciate the same way. So, if you are on your way, do not be afraid, as much as INFORMED. That will see you through to the best possible outcome for yourself. Gastric Bypass surgery is high risk, make no mistake about it. Culturally, one of the most unfortunate and cheapening ways of referring to gastric bypass surgery is as 'weight loss surgery.' Over the last three years, this moniker has proved to stir up all kinds of psychological fears, fantasies and tensions in all directions. These are hard to quell once they start up— one of the most egregious being that if one has " weight loss surgery " and does not " lose all their weight according to whomever's standards, " that the patient is somehow inferior, (again, and as usual). This is not what this surgery is about. That would be a sad addendum to a life-giving procedure. This surgery is about giving the body back its life. As you can see as you look about in media, " Weight Lost surgery, or WLS " has become a flat-out marketing phrase. It has caused the media to think this surgery is all about being thin.... Rather than healthy. A person will become " slender-er " as a result, but, RNY gastric bypass has definite bounceback, 10-20 pounds for most everyone. Read the fine print and believe it. I hope you will realize going in what the REAL quality is. Lurk on gradlist (on yahoo) and listen to those 3 and 4 years out. IT IS and remains a surgery to give people much more health and it gives them a tool that if they sweat over and with it, it will work for them. But, it takes work to maintain the tool. I hope you will read these words off the page: after the first 12 to 18 months out, then vigilance to one's DAILY eating habits is required by MOST, and must be constant. It is in the fine print. Read it and believe it. Gastric bypass surgery does not give a person a new metabolism, a new brain, or a new way of dealing with tensions. If there are issues here before, they will be there after. They call the first 18 mos to 24 months 'the honey moon period,' because 'hunger' has not yet returned for some, (although for others it has been there from day one, and especially after first 12 months) and it FEELS like a ride on auto-pilot; not real hungry, can't eat much anyway, weight keeps dropping. But THEN, the day comes when normal hunger returns, and one can eat a good deal more than before, especially non-dense foods, and well, the honeymoon period when you felt everything was magic--and in a way-- it was.... but now that time is over. NOW vigilance and work are the order of the day---just like other healthy people who want to stay healthy as they can--they have to work at it. Just like other people who watch their weight and pull back and go forward with food at intervals--they have to work at it. There is a honeymoon period for many patients, but when it is over, it is OVER. This is in the fine print, read it and believe it. This is part of being a responsible person, to know what lies ahead and to prepare for it so you don't waste too much energy in whining and regretting. Just in getting on with life, LIVING...that was the point of the surgery, wasn't it? It is high-risk surgery: This surgery is properly called gastric bypass surgery. It is SURGERY. It is, for many, a life-extending surgery. It also interferes with proper digestion of calcium, B12, iron and other vitamins and minerals that the body must have in order for its bone and tissues and internal organs not to die and/or be compromised. Listen in on grad list (you must be one year post-op to post, but you are free to lurk and thereby have access to all messages, archives, photos, etc.) and hear about those who did not take this seriously at first, who thought a couple Tums or a chewy Viactiv or a Carnation Instant Breakfast drink a day was going to do it. I think you ought listen to your doc, but also listen to those who have been post-op for a long time and whose blood tests and dexascans are in good ranges. Hear what they do IN ADDITION to what docs and nutritionists have said, and what they do that is CONTRARY to what docs and nutritionists have guessed about. And believe, there are a ton of guesses and conflicting directives out there. The idea is just this; when you are as fully informed as you can possibly be, you will do much better. Everyone in the community of post-ops wants people to do their very best they can, and with as much info as possible. Because so many of the early patients took these risks with little or no dependable info, everyone wants to make sure that people are supported AND INFORMED beforehand and AFTER as well. More than one in 200 have severe complications from this surgery. On grad list, we just received word of another woman's death --she was over one year out from surgery. It sounded as if she may have died from malnutrition. On Yahoo, there is a memorial site that was set up by one of the original post-ops listing some of the patients who lost their lives on the OR table. Patients have had embolisms and died in their family's arms and on the basement floor and at the wheel of their cars, in the weeks after surgery. Many have had massive staph infections that nearly killed them. Some have had severe complications that have stolen their health in a whole other way than obesity alone would ever have. The surgery is not surgery-lite. The fact that it sometimes can be done laproscopically, that it may take only 90 minutes, all these may make it seem like it's like having minor surgery. It isn't. Most post-op people I have read and hear from, regardless of pain, and even complications, afterward, are so grateful for having recovered a good deal of their health, to be able to think in terms of the long run rather than how they will die in a wheelchair. There is no harm to liking clothes and being handsome or pretty in whatever way you have thought about for a long time. But that is a side-effect of the surgery. The primary effect is that you have a chance, a one-time chance, to release your body from the hell that extreme overweight has put on every single part of you one precious and wild body. People who take the risk of having this surgery who are 100 and many more pounds over a healthy weight, are in my opinion, heroes and heroines. Every time I hear of ANYONE, but especially those over 300, 400, 500, 600 pounds, knowing as I do the huge risks that surgery and anesthesia pose for anyone, let alone them... I just want to embrace them. They stepped up to a very scary line, they were desperate for their lives, they thought they may have lost their minds to be contemplating all this, they leapt off a mountain believing somewhere down below, outside their sight, there was a net at the bottom. For most, they were brought back safe and sound. The net held. It would be a sin to diminish anyone's bravery for taking such a high risk to gain their health. It would be a travesty to those who risked but died, to say anything less. This again, is just my opinion, and it comes with love and peace, ceep Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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