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Kittycat

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Posts posted by Kittycat

  1. :-?

    I am in the process of talking myself into this Lap Band procedure. I am somewhat disheartend by some of the problems you folks have gone through....Are these problems that occur to everybody and the big question would you re-consider having this procedure done?

    Hi Doug,

    Welcome!!

    Like Lisa said, it's the best decision I have ever made and so far I have had to problems with my band, the fills or following the program to weight loss.

    I hope you decide to go for it, you won't regret it!

    Good Luck!

  2. Everyone is different! That's the bottom line. No one can predict how many fills you may need to get to your "sweetspot". Saying women should only need 1-2 fills is not realistic. It depends on how much the doctor puts in, at any given time. I had 3cc put in during surgery, 1cc in July and 1cc in August. I have 5cc in my 9cc and I am doing fine, but that's for now. Things change daily.

    Mona-Camille, you need to seriously talk to the doctor and figure out what's right for you!

    Good Luck Hon!!

  3. Hi there, the band is only a tool to reduce the amount of food you consume. However, you can still make bad food choices and eat around the band.

    If you are truly ready to make this committment, it might be wise to actively work on the food addiction too. I am a chronic snacker, and still today have trouble not eating in the evening. I am not hungry, I just eat because it's a habit. I need to find something else to do to distract me from eating.

    If you follow the guidelines, protein, veggies, grains, fruit and have a treat once in awhile, you will be successful!!

    Good Luck!!

  4. Hi Everyone,

    For anyone who is questioning whether the band is the right choice over RNY or Gastric Bypass, read this.

    This is the story of my friend Pam:

    Pam, who had the RNY surgery performed one week before I was banded 3 months ago today, was hospitalized in the U.S for a week after surgery, spent another week in a U.S hotel for monitoring and then returned home to Canada. She was home for approxmately a week when started having difficulty keeping food down, she vomitted at every meal. She called the surgeon and he told her to change her choice of foods, softer, easier foods. By week two, it was getting worse and her abdomen was starting to swell and hurt. Her husband took her to the ER and they found that she had a severe stomach infection, she had emergency surgery that night and two more the next day to get the infection under control.

    She was in the hospital for 6 1/2 weeks, virtually in the bed the whole time, she had a vac unit in her open incision for the entire time. She was transferred to a rehab hospital to help her get back on her feet. She suffered from muscle atrophy and could not even walk. 8 weeks after the first visit to the ER was able to go home, still with the vac in her open incision to keep any risk of infection under control. At home she was basically in bed most of the day. Last week, she was back in the hospital with pneumonia. The pneumonia can result in further complications to her stomach, if the the infected lung fluid gets into her stomach (swallowing after coughing). Poor girl is still in the hospital today.

    Like most of you, I was banded, recovered after about a week or less and went on with my life. Although our struggles are ongoing and our primary goal is to lose the weight. Pam has had to fight for her life for over two months. Although Pam's experience is not the norm for RNY surgery, it can happen. She has lost over 100lbs now, but lost 2 1/2 months of time with her husband and children...and almost lost her life.

    I could have had RNY or Gastric bypass surgery at no cost to me, our Provincial Healthcare covers it. But I chose to pay for Lapband surgery myself and it's the best decision I have ever made!

    Thanks!

  5. You would be surprised what you CAN get away with. I went on pre-op and work with an office full of women, only the people I told really noticed that I was only drinking shakes, no one else. And..the kicker is, the people who still don't know, haven't even commented on my weight loss at all. Is 46 lbs not even noticable? Hello?! Anyway, if you chose not to share your secret with certain people, you can figure a way to cover it up.

    I am back on Weight Watchers, I am doing Atkins, I am on a high protein veggie diet....you can do it, if you need to!!

    Good Luck!

  6. This is exactly how my surgeon does it.

    He feels for the port, I lift my head up to assist him in doing so, he puts the needle in the port and extracts the existing fluid to ensure #1 that he's in the right spot and # 2 that there is no leakage and all of the fluid he put in, comes back out, then he injects it all back in plus the fill.

    My surgeon does not use fluoro at all unless there is a problem locating the port or it's flipped.

    So far I have had no problems (2 fills). You will not have restriction with liquids. Hopefully when you are on solids, you will feel the difference.

    Good Luck!!!

  7. I totally agree with you Arlene.

    My surgeon sees me monthly, but grills me with questions and if I am losing weight and feeling full after eating the standard 3/4 of a cup per sitting, he won't fill me.

    Five weeks post op, I still had some restriction and thought I might be ready for a fill, he said no. I have had two fills now 5cc in my 9cc and restriction is great. I see him on Sept 27th for a check up and if I still feel this way, I don't want a fill.

    I am so blessed to be so close to my clinic and have the option of calling when I need to. If I lose restriction and feel that I need a fill, I call, they book me in right away.

    Take control back, don't let the fill doctors dictate when you should have a fill, you need to judge for yourself. My surgeon told me, if you are using more willpower than bandpower it's time for a fill.

    Good Luck everyone!!!

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