Getting A Gastric Bypass: Desperate Times Call For Desperate Measures
Why get a gastric bypass? It sometimes goes like this: you’ve been looking at yourself in the mirror and are looking at all the flab on you? Have you been laying awake all night as you remember your physical difficulties during the day? Life isn’t exactly when you’re overweight and a lot of people try to rid themselves of the fat on their body. The problem is sometimes alll those exercise programs and diets don’t exactly work out for those doing them. What do you do when your weight yo-yos up and down or, worse, it just won’t go down?
Well, that’s the time when you think about getting a surgical option. Liposuctions are a good stopgap option and they can often do the trick – all it takes is a good push and maintaining weight is a lot easier. However, sometimes even that is not enough. The fat keeps on coming back, whether it’s just a genetic predesposition to it or something similar. Some people really need help to get them out of obesity’s tight embrace. That’s where a gastric bypass comes in.
A gastric bypass, or as medical professionals call it a “Roux-en-Y gastric bypass”, is a surgical weight-loss procedure that enables the patient to lose weight on a constant and regular basis. It is one of the more safe options and is because of this the preferred option when any weight-loss surgery is being considered. What it does is essentially make a small pouch in the upper part of the stomach, and connect it directly to the middle of your small intestine. This severely cuts down on your caloric intake by skipping most of the intestinal tract and also reduces your appetite by making your stomach handle less food.
The procedure may sound like an easy thing but a gastric bypass is still a major surgical operation and has its own risks. You’ll be under general anesthesia for this operation and tubes will be inserted via your nose and your abdomen to make sure you recover completely after the operation. The operation itself will only take a few hours.
It may even be shorter if you under go a laparoscopic bypass, a procedure which uses a laparoscope instead of opening your abdomen completely for the operation. This results in less infection and accelerates healing time. After the operation, your doctor will probably keep you in the hospital for three to five days for observation.
Of course, immediately after the operation you will be experiencing a few changes. First of all, in the first three days after the bypass, you’ll be on an IV drip – no eating until your stomach heals. Then it’s twelve weeks of reginemnted diet as you progress to solid foods again. You’ll also be feeling the effects of the gastric bypass. When you eat a lot of food or eat quickly, it may cause you to vomit or pain. You will feel yourself losing weight in the next few months but will also have to suffer the side-effects like weakness, hair loss and body aches.
This is why you should never undertake a gastric bypass unless it’s truly necessary.
More Gastric Bypass Articles
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- Why Go for Gastric Bypass Surgery? - December 18th, 2009
- What You Gain and Lose from Gastric Bypass Surgery - December 11th, 2009
- What To Eat After Gastric Bypass Surgery - December 4th, 2009
- Understanding Gastric Bypass - November 27th, 2009
- Type of Foods to Eat After Gastric Bypass Surgery - November 20th, 2009
- Top 10 Tips for Success after Gastric Bypass Surgery - November 13th, 2009
- Thinning Down: Do You Need A Gastric Bypass For It? - November 6th, 2009
- The Benefits Of Gastric Bypass - October 30th, 2009
- Slimming Down Shortcut: Getting A Gastric Bypass - October 23rd, 2009
- Losing Weight The Easy Way: A Gastric Bypass - October 16th, 2009
- Is Gastric Surgery For Your Obese Teen? - October 9th, 2009
- Instant and Long-Term Weight Loss with Gastric Bypass Surgery - October 2nd, 2009
- How to Avoid Weight Gain after Gastric Bypass - September 25th, 2009
- How Gastric Bypass Works - September 18th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass: What You Need to Know Before You Go Under the Knife - September 4th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass Tips: Switch to a Healthy Lifestyle after Weight Loss! - August 28th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass Surgery: How much does it Cost? - August 21st, 2009
- Gastric Bypass Surgery And Depression - August 14th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass: Is It Really Necessary? - August 7th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass’ Downside - July 31st, 2009
- Gastric Bypass Diet: Dos and Don’ts - July 24th, 2009
- Gastric Bypass And Other Treatments For Obesity - July 17th, 2009
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