Guest guest Posted August 13, 2001 Report Share Posted August 13, 2001 well said !!!..I wish I had thought that ! Thanks for putting it in proper prospective ! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2001 Report Share Posted August 13, 2001 I am going to tell everyone, and all of you that On October 1st, no matter how much I kick and scream and beg, YOU MUST MAKE ME GET OUT OF BED AND WALK WALK WALK! Every Day, scream at me drag me if you have to, but make me walk! Nahodil BPD/DS 10/1/01 - Lap Dr. Elariny Fairfax, INOVA Hospital : Re: Larry Young, Dr. Husted & Choosing Your Surgeon Ok.. I felt a need to address this real quick. Everyone has implied that it was the DS surgery that killed Larry.. it was surgery.. but not specifically the DS. Larry was 2 weeks out from surgery and doing well, until he threw a blood clot that lodged in his lung (yes, I was told by his angel that the cause of death was pulmonary embolism). This complication is NOT specific to the DS.. this is a risk of ANY surgery- INCLUDING CHILDBIRTH/C-SECTION.. yet I don't see women chickening out on having kids because there is a small risk that they will throw a clot. You must look at the big picture.. Larry weighed well over 600 lbs, which further increased his chances of throwing clots. He had limited mobility- again, a predisposal to clots. The guy had the same risk of throwing clots if he'd had a Roux-en-Y.. or a coronary bypass.. or knee replacement.. or having no surgery at all (yes, super morbidly obese folk who have limited mobility can throw clots without even having surgery.. its another reason why we don't want to stay super MO). My point is this: yes, Larry died after weight loss surgery. But that surgery was not the direct cause of the embolism.. it was a contributing factor. , you say you want more children- will knowing what I've just told you make you wants kids any less? I doubt it.. It is normal to be afraid of the unknown risks of surgery.. but you have to decide if the risks involved in surgery are worse than the risks you face now daily. Knowledge is power, when used in context. Learn everything, learn the probabilities for each risk, compare them to a situation you are comfy with.. if the risks of surgery are no worse than other risks you take daily, decide if you feel its a good thing. But don't let 1 unfortunate death put you off weight loss surgery because you might die. Because the big picture is that chances are, you will not. Hope this eases the minds of those who are afraid.. Hugs, Liane > In a message dated 8/13/01 12:15:04 PM, duodenalswitch@y... writes: > > << I am definitely leaning towards chickening out after reading all this. I > > was very gung-ho, but now I'm not so sure. It's very scary stuff. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 2001 Report Share Posted August 14, 2001 It's true. My mother died from blood clots in her lungs on the 2nd day of her vacation after having no surgery. They said it was because she was MO and sat in the car for two days. She was 47 when she died. This is another reason I wanted the surgery. They didn't use any filters on me, re: history of PE, but they did give me heperine shots while in the hospital. Donna > Ok.. I felt a need to address this real quick. > > Everyone has implied that it was the DS surgery that killed Larry.. it > was surgery.. but not specifically the DS. Larry was 2 weeks out from > surgery and doing well, until he threw a blood clot that lodged in his > lung (yes, I was told by his angel that the cause of death was > pulmonary embolism). This complication is NOT specific to the DS.. > this is a risk of ANY surgery- INCLUDING CHILDBIRTH/C-SECTION.. yet I > don't see women chickening out on having kids because there is a small > risk that they will throw a clot. You must look at the big picture.. > Larry weighed well over 600 lbs, which further increased his chances > of throwing clots. He had limited mobility- again, a predisposal to > clots. The guy had the same risk of throwing clots if he'd had a > Roux-en-Y.. or a coronary bypass.. or knee replacement.. or having no > surgery at all (yes, super morbidly obese folk who have limited > mobility can throw clots without even having surgery.. its another > reason why we don't want to stay super MO). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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