Thursday, April 8, 2010

Women and gastric bypass

Women who went through the procedure are recommended to avoid pregnancy for at least two years after the surgery. Pregnant women are required to take nutritional supplements like vitamins and minerals to get the proper nutrients for her and the baby. Gastric bypass surgeries are not recommended for everybody.


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It is often recommended to those who have a BMI of 40 or those who weigh more than a hundred pounds. Everybody who would be undergoing the procedure would have to take a mental exam, for those who eat due to emotional problems are likely to fail in losing weight.

Gastric bypass surgeries have 2% of fatalities, one percent due to complications and the other one percent would brought by the failure of the patients to follow the dietary restrictions following the surgery. Before undergoing the procedure, it is important to understand these consequences and be prepared to change our lifestyle.

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Thursday, April 1, 2010

Other conditions associated with Gastric Bypass Surgery

• Pulmonary Embolism is a condition where blood clots developing in the legs which can get carried off to the lungs. There are techniques which can be performed to prevent this kind of condition to happen like using surgical compression stockings.
• Peritonitis is also another condition when stomach fluid leaks into the abdominal cavity or where the intestine is connected. There is a need to immediately seal the leak before it becomes a serious condition.
• Ulcers can develop among patients, 5 to 15 percent of the time.
• It could also result to hernia or incision hernia which is a weakness in the incision. It would often require surgical repair.
• There are situations when the stomach moves too fast for the small intestine. This is often referred to as the dumping syndrome. It is often accompanied with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, and sweating.
• Vitamin and mineral deficiency are also possible complications of the surgery like anemia and vitamin D deficiency.
• It could also cause problems in the kidney like kidney stones.
• Gallstones could also be a result of this operation. • Stomach ulcers could also develop but this could be managed by the usual treatments used for ulcers.

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Monday, March 29, 2010

Other health conditions affected by Weight Loss Surgery

In addition to weight loss, gastric bypass surgery could also resolve health issues associated to obesity. They could improve or lessen the risk of Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, sleep apnea, asthma, arthritis, joint pain, and even heart disease and cancer. Those who have undergone gastric bypass surgical procedures are also exposed to risks and complications just like in any other surgery. When considering getting this kind of weight-loss procedure, it is not only the benefits that you would have to know but also its risks and dangers.
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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Gastric Bypass Benefits

Gastric bypass surgeries are the most common bariatric surgical procedures performed, nowadays. Bariatric surgical procedures is the term used to refer to weight-loss surgeries. There are more and more people who are choosing to have the procedure to avoid the risks brought by morbid obesity. There are numerous benefits by getting a gastric bypass surgery. Those who have undergone the surgery were expected to lose about 50 to 60% of their weight. Most of the patients would say that they reached the lowest point of their weight two years after their surgery.
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Friday, March 19, 2010

After Gastric Bypass Surgery Remember to Eat Healthy

Bariatric surgery is certainly a radical procedure that needs to be thoroughly investigated before any scalpel is lifted. Gastric bypass surgery is a weight loss procedure that results in major changes not only in the body, but also in one’s lifestyle. To be able to adapt well to those changes, a patient needs to bear in mind these guidelines that ensure success after the surgery. Success means maintaining a healthy weight and preventing the possibility of regaining weight.

Do not eat foods that are not healthy or nutritious.  The culprits for weight gain are foods and liquids that are rich in calories, fat, and sugar. These include soda, milk shakes, alcohol, and sugar-rich desserts. These foods do not provide nutrients; instead, they cause hunger pangs and vomiting. Avoid them so that you do not out your weight loss effort to waste. Make sure that your diet is rich in protein, and include lots of fruits and vegetables.

Do not eat foods that make you feel uncomfortable. Sticky, dry, and fibrous foods such as pasta, rice, bread, and meat are usually a no-no for bypass surgery patients. Soda is also not allowed because it causes bloating, gas pain, and even pressure in the stomach.
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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Basics of Gastric Bypass Surgery

Gastric Bypass Surgery divides the stomach into two parts, sealing off the upper section from the lower. The surgeon then connects the upper stomach directly to the lower section of the small intestine, which bypasses the duodenum and part of the jejunum, and limits the amount of calories that are absorbed from food.
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Sunday, March 7, 2010

Surgery Risks

The other one percent cause of fatality among people who gone through the procedure, would be about not following the dietary restrictions that should be followed after the surgery. After gastric surgery, the body could no longer handle too much intake of high-sugar and high-fat food. There is a special diet that those who have just undergone the surgery should follow.

Bypass diet would usually include foods that are high in protein but low in fat, fiber, calories, and sugar. There are vitamins and mineral supplements that are required to be taken to avoid health and nutritional deficiencies. With more and more people turning to gastric bypass surgery as a weight-loss option, it is important to understand not only the procedure and the benefits. It is also important to weigh the risks and if our lifestyle and our body would be able to handle the dramatic loss of weight.

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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Risks Associated with Gastric Bypass Surgery

Gastric Bypass surgery is a restrictive/malabsorptive surgical procedure. Most patients do not have complications after Gastric Bypass surgery.

However, as with any medical procedure and particularly surgery, there are a number of risk factors during the operations and also post operatively. Gastric bypass patients could develop gallstones, stomach ulcers, hernia or nutritional deficiencies following surgery. The part of the stomach which was bypassed can get enlarged, it could cause bloating and hiccups. There is also the Dumping syndrome which happens when the food moves quickly to the small intestine. This can happen after eating foods high in sugar or fat.


Monday, March 1, 2010

Gastric Bypass Surgery Dietary Considerations

Having a different sized (smaller) stomach has impacts on how much food the person can eat. There are special diets that a patient recuperating from gastric bypass surgery follows. The diet of the post operative patient is now so important for his nutrition.

Nutritional supplements are often recommended following this form of surgery. There are people who have undergone the surgery reporting a reduction in weight of as much as 50 to 60 percent a year after the intervention. There are even some who would report an incredible 80% weight loss. However, it is still possible for patients to stretch their stomachs and have that large size again. There is still a possibility of getting back those lost pounds. That is why doctors would recommend dietary restrictions and exercise plant that would keep the pounds away.

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Saturday, February 27, 2010

Keyhole Gastric Surgery

These days, the days of highly invasive surgery are over. Surgical incisions are made in the belly to perform the procedure. Thankfully the whole process is done as keyhole surgery, with a laparoscope. This will enable the doctor to see the internal organs and undertake the surgery. The laparoscopic gastric bypass actually makes the hospitalisation and the recovery period shorter and quicker. There are still some open full gastric bypass surgery procedures performed, however, they are comminly wound-related problems with this kind of procedure. The laparoscopic gastric bypass procedure is undertaken under general asaesthetic. The surgery lasts for approximaely four hours. The gastic bypass patient is monitored for about two to six days following the surgery.
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Thursday, February 25, 2010

Eat Less after Gastric Bypass Surgery

It has a single objective, and that is that Gastric bypass is surgery that is designed to help you lose weight. After the surgery, you will not be able to eat as much as before. For many people this is a welcome relief from the years of trying to limit their food intacke.

Food will go past the small pouch and upper small intestine and keep travelling down the stomach. Food goes directly to the middle of the intestine. The small intestine takes in much of the calories, it is therefore restricted in the calorie absorbtion. A Y formation is formed in the area below and adjacent to the stomach.

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

What is Gastric Bypass Surgery?

So what is this surgery that gets so much press? Is it the latest must have medical accessory of the rich and famous? Is it the weight loss technique of last resort? Is it a high risk gamble with some good and bad consequences?

Gastric Bypass Surgery is basically a medical procedure to make the stomach smaller. The food will bypass part of the small intestine, and, by doing so, the patient will consume less because he feels full immediately. Getting full easily would reduce the calories taken by the body and eventually lead to weight loss.

The most popular bypass procedure performed is called the Roux-en Y gastric bypass. This process involves, a small pouch is created on the top of the stomach. It is stapled, to cut it offfrom the rest of the stomach. Gastric bypass stories. This small pouch will not be able to digest food. The upper part of the small intestine, the duodenum, is attached to this small pouch.
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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Considering Gastric Bypass Surgery?

So why consider gastric bypass surgery?  There are lots of reasons for people to give serious considerations to gastric bypass surgery. And I know people do not consider it lightly. It is quite invasive surgery.

For a start there is the actual loss of body weight that occurs after the surgery.It is claimed that the successful surgery lead to about a 40 to 50% loss of body weight a year after the procedure. There are other factors that lead a person to consider this surgery beyond weight loss, but related to weight loss when considering gastric bypass surgery. Other factors inlcude the associated medical conditions, and how this surgery can reduce the risks and implications of medical conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure, cerebro vascular accidents, stroke, heart disease and even some forms of cancer.
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Saturday, February 20, 2010

Gastric Bypass Surgery

Are you wanting to know more about gastric Bypass surgery? It is a very common precedure, theses days - across the world, we have seen a amazing increase in the number of gastric bypass surgery proceduresa. There are many hypotheses for this – for example it may be in response for the increase in the number of people suffering from obesity, it may the “I want it now” mentality or the fast food addiction we all have.. According to the American Society of Bariatric Surgery, there are about 140,000 gastric bypass surgeries being performed every year.
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Friday, February 19, 2010

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