Wednesday, March 30, 2011

If you have only 10 or 20 lbs or even 50 lbs to lose, gastric weight loss surgery is not right opt



Gastric weight loss surgery



Thousands of men and women are running for weight loss surgery each year in the U.S. and around the world. You can not help but notice the growing popularity of weight loss surgery. We can see it everywhere. Superficially, the weight loss surgery, or Weight Loss Surgery, sounds like a simple quick fix to a long-term obesity. Of course, nothing is so easy. Losing weight is certainly not for those who want a quick fix, or simply do not want to diet. Weight loss surgery  Patients are often have to follow strict dietary guidelines following surgery or are sadly disappointed with the results of weight loss.

If you have only ten or twenty pounds or even fifty pounds to lose, weight loss surgery is not an right option. Patients considered for Weight loss surgery must be at least 100 pounds overweight and a BMI of at least 40 times, patients are about 75 pounds overweight with a BMI of 35 is considered if they also have a combination of some specific co-morbidities like hypertension, diabetes or sleep apnea.


Gastric bypass surgery



When most people think of bariatric surgery, they think of gastric bypass , a procedure that redirects the digestive system and causes rapid weight loss. Unfortunately, gastric bypass surgery also often leads to some deficiencies of nutrition that can cause serious health complications.



Another form of bariatric surgery often performed is called gastroplasty. Gastroplasty is similar to a gastric bypass because it  can redirects the digestive system, but it also limits the amount of food that can be eaten by making the small size of stomach



None of these procedures are reversible. Both gastric bypass and gastroplasty  require 5 to 6 inch incisions and hospital stay of 3-4 days. Possible side effects from this type of weight loss are dumping syndrome, that can be a combination of nausea, chest and abdominal cramps, sweating and diarrhea. Other risks and complications such as malabsorption, vitamin deficiency and chronic abdominal pain. These symptoms are often avoided by eliminating foods high in sugar and fat diet. Serious and potentially fatal complication of gastric bypass and gastroplasty  called anastomosis leak . Leakage  in anastomosis occurs when a leak in the baseline or at staple  line. This fatal complication is often hard to diagnose and requires immediate hospitalization. Fortunately, most patients with weight loss surgery, this is a rare complication occurring in less than 2% of cases..



The potential risks and complications of gastric bypass surgery and gastroplasty are enough to scare the morbidly obese patients away from what is often a rescue operation, which causes weight loss and reduces the patient risk of heart disease, diabetes and other potentially fatal diseases.





Adjustable gastric Lap- band



Adjustable Gastric Lap-Band is a group of hollow sylastic. The band is placed around the upper 3rd of the stomach to create a small pouch  in stomach that initially can hold two ounces of food, and can accommodate up to four to six ounces. Creating this small stomach space on the upper part of the stomach leads to a prolonged feeling of fullness because the nerves that signal the brain when you are full are located in the upper portion of stomach. The group continued its work by slowly allowing the food you eat to be released in the lower part of the stomach for digestion. Attached to the band is a tube that ends with a port attached to the muscles of abdomen in below the ribs. The goal is to allow port access to the band to add saline that can slowly fills the band, and cause increased  stomach restriction .



Immediately after the gastric surgery the band is empty. About 6 weeks after surgery of LAP-BAND, or when the weight loss plateau is reached, the surgeon added a little amount of saline. Even if the band can hold about 4-5 cc of saline, only small amounts of saline added each time. The quantity of fill in the lap-band, and the added amount of each fill  can vary from situation of individual patients.



A laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding performed under anesthesia in an operating room. During surgery a 3-5 and half-inch to two inch incision is made in the upper part of abdomen. Unless complications, the procedure takes about one hour to complete. All patients undergoing this procedure should be aware of the  certain possibilities of complications like adhesions from previous operations that can make a laparoscopy impossible. In this case the surgeon to convert to an open surgery with a five inch incision and longer recovery time. Many surgeons allows patients to return home the same surgery day, however, other surgeons require patients to overnight stay with the release from the hospital about 24 hours after surgery. Although most Lap-Band patients feel quite well within 2 or 3 weeks, complete recovery can take upto six weeks ........ read more