Guest guest Posted July 31, 2005 Report Share Posted July 31, 2005 Thanks for the information, Cathy. I too gave the amnio odds alot of thought; however, I decided against the amnio as I had a slightly better chance of having a miscarriage from the procedure than having a baby with an " amnio detectable " birth defect. As for the odds with surgery versus the odds of premature death as a result of the obesity, I agree with you: the excess weight is a bigger issue than the surgery. I may or may not die from the surgery; however, I KNOW that I will die prematurly should I continue the way I am now. Pam --- Cathy catic15@...> wrote: > Hi, Pam - > The most commonly cited figure I've seen is 1 in > 200, or .5% - but > I've seen figures ranging from 1 in 300 (cited by a > medical practice > that was promoting the surgeries) down to 1 in 50 > (from a recent > analysis that re-examined prior studies). So there's > a lot of > variability. Ditto in the time-frame they look at > to consider the > mortality figures. . . 30 days is the most common > period if they're > considering simply direct complications of surgery, > and it's certainly > the highest-risk period. However, I've seen some > articles in medical > journals that look at a full year and at > complications that come from > things like nutritional problems from the rapid > weight loss and the > changes the bypass causes, that sort of thing, > rather than just the > actual surgical procedure. > > The biggest thing they all seem to agree on is that > the experience of > the surgeon is critical - the more experience the > surgeon has with the > procedure, the better the outcomes are. To which my > response was, > " DUH! " > > 1 in 200 is nothing to sneeze at - I gave those odds > a lot of thought > when I was pregnant and my OB wanted me to have > amnio done, which had > a .5% chance of inducing a miscarriage. I > eventually had one when I > realized that at my age the chances of miscarriage > were slighly less > than the chances of discovering a life-threatening > birth defect. For > the same reason, I've become more willing to commit > to WLS as I've > come to realize that my weight has become a bigger > risk to my health > than the surgery. > > Cathy > > > > > Hi Cathy, #1, I thought that the mortality rate > was 1 > > in 100, and #2, I thought that if you were to have > > life-threatening complications from surgery, it > would > > have been in the first few weeks, (you know, > gastric > > leaks, blood clots, etc), not within the first > YEAR! > > Pam > > > > __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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