Jump to content

Timber

Members
  • Posts

    4
  • Joined

  • Last visited

About Timber

  • Birthday 02/07/1982

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • Location
    Tucson, AZ
  • Interests
    Dragons! Pretty much any kind of animal/pet/wildlife.<br /><br />Always ready for a healthy recipe swap!

Timber's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/4)

0

Reputation

  1. So, time to wipe the brow, cause it's all good. I drove to SD on Sunday, went over the border Monday morning, and by 9:30 a.m. I was on the table with the fluroscope and he said it definitely had NOT slipped. However, there was so much inflamation around the band and through my esophogus that it was a darn good thing I came in when I did. If I had let it go on like that for another few weeks I most definitely would have caused the kind of damage that only surgery can fix. He told me the safest course of action was to do a complete unfill and wait 4 weeks before coming back. At that point we're going to see how the inflamation is and if I even want want a partial refill or not. He also prescribed me a liquid diet for the next week and Maalox, which is nothing. I'm a liquid diet blackbelt at this point. So...whew. The very last thing I wanted was to have to get it removed because it would put me in the kind of debt that I would never be able to emerge from, so that's a good thing. And really, since the final "big" fill, I would say that 1/3 of the time I was angry about the band and atypically grouchy because I would vomit and then for the next few days my emotions would run away from me because of lack of food, and 2/3 of the time I was so pleased with the effects it was having on my life. I've learned not to let the grouchiness get me down. Yes, I was in a lot of pain more often than neccessary, but looking back at it now it, if that is part of the price I pay to lose weight and get healthy, then I'm willing to pay it. But the big news is that I didn't slip the band, which, after reading all the online forum posts, I was feeling pretty confident that I hadn't, but it was still a relief to hear the words come out of his mouth. I'm not too happy about having to go back again in a month, but I am also gonna look at this as a time to really test myself and see if the behavior changes can stick even without the band being full. I really hope they do, I'm gonna keep it simple and not put too much pressure on myself, but we'll see if I even need to get the fill put back in or not. I am NOT giving up on this final push of 30 lbs to get to my goal weight, no matter what happens with the band *grip on diet is so tight that knuckles turn white* Thanks so very much to everyone who replied, you gave me untold comfort and I really appreciate you being here when I needed someone to talk to. Thanks for sticking up for me there too, Smiley...you are correct, I was being too vague when I said "all the time." I know for a fact that I haven't lost 115 lbs by purging through my lap-band, but instead by using that lapband as a tool for all the healthy habits I want in my life. Now, for 3 weeks (after the 1 week liquid diet) while I have absolutely no fill, we'll see how well those habits hold up. *I'm chanting to myself that they Will hold up, they will they will they WILL!* :-) Thanks again!
  2. Thank you so much for responding, it has really put my mind at ease! Once I read your post I did some more research on simple unfills being able to solve the problems I've been experiencing and I have some more hope. For some reason I had it stuck in my head that pain=slip=surgery and that's it. I knew that vomiting was a sign of a slip, but I do that all the time anyhow and it's never hurt me like this before. At least I'm no longer worrying so much about if the band has slipped, that maybe I'm just having a really "bad band" week. (Hehe, that would make a funny musical band name, bunch of recent-weightloss-ees playing instruments and calling themselves the Bad Band.) I guess I'll know for sure on Monday. But as of today I was able to get water and juice down, and even some yogurt, so I'm feeling much better. In response to specific questions, I unfortunately couldn't get into the clinic sooner than Monday because I'm a caregiver and that's the earliest time I could get a replacement. I also am traveling to TJ to get this done as there is no one with a fluro in my state. TJ because is only a 6 hour drive from here, but it still took me some time to make those plans. I'll just have to tough it out until then, but I'm being super cautious and I don't think anything has gotten worse in the last day or so. Also, almost every single one of those 3 vomits/month were mostly food specific. I am trying so many new fruits and vegetables in my diet these days and every once in a while I just find one that doesn't agree with me and gets stuck. About once a month I would try to eat at a certain time of day and end up vomiting everything back up, I've learned that early in the morning and later at night my band tends to be tighter and I'm lucky to get even liquids down. But, from looking around other parts of the board, this seems to be a common problem for others. I guess there are just certain times of day when our bodies are more inflamed and the band is tighter? Anyhow, I've learned to avoid those, but you also have a very good point about the PMS and dehydration issues, I'll be sure to look back over my food journal and see if these vomiting episodes occur around my period or not, or if my water intake was low that day. Thanks for the great suggestion! Again, thank you very much for taking the time to help me out with this, any further advice or wisedom would be greatly appreciated. Plus, I'll be sure to let you know how my appointment turns out. Thanks so much!
  3. Timber

    Slipped Band?

    Hi All! I had surgery on Jan. 17th, 2008. I've lost about 115 lbs and have had a total overhaul of how I view/consume food and am very happy with my success so far. It took 4 tries for my band to be filled to the "correct" place where I actually felt any kind of restriction. I ended up with 8 ccs in a 10 cc band, and I got that final fill done in August of '08. About 3 times a month, since that final fill, I would mistakenly injest something that will make me vomit. I was doing exactly what all the literature says to do, I wasn't trying to down huge servings of white bread or soda, but since my diet was so full of new things, I would mistakenly trip across healthy things that would stick above the band no matter how well I chewed them, like certain raw vegetables and whole-wheat pasta. Also, I have always had a really sensitive gag reflex, so this is only slightly more than the norm from before I had the lap-band. Anyhow, every time I'd vomit, I would revert to a liquid diet for a few days, load up on the Ibuprofren, and then gradually get back onto a regular diet, no problems. No consistent pain or anything like that, the liquid diet was more a precaution than anything, and I would always be just fine resuming a normal diet within a day or two. However, I vomited several times about 4 days ago and even with a liquid diet I've been uncomfortable (not a lot of pain, just enough so I notice it) right around the lap band. I've stuck to a liquid diet this whole time have in fact vomited up the liquids twice more in the last two days, however I'm able to keep down the majority of what I'm ingesting. I'm still relatively hydrated but definitely getting a run-down feeling from not getting enough protein/carbs/calories. My main question is: Do you think I've slipped the band? If the inital 3-times-a-month vomiting was a sign that the band had slipped, why was I okay to eat a normal diet 90% of the time inbetween the vomiting? I thought that once the band slipped you were unable to injest anything? Do you think this is a simple matter of the band being over-filled? I have an appointment with our friend the Flouroscope on Monday, so I'll know for sure at that point if the band is slipped. If it has slipped, does that automatically mean I have to have the band removed? How much is that going to cost me? I don't have a single spare cent to pay for any kind of surgery. If I can't afford the surgery, can I still function with all of the saline removed? Sorry for the long post, but I wanted to give the backstory. I'm pretty darn nervous about all of this right now and would appreciate any input I could get. Thanks so much!
  4. Hi All! I had surgery on Jan. 17th, 2008. I've lost about 115 lbs and have had a total overhaul of how I view/consume food and am very happy with my success so far. It took 4 tries for my band to be filled to the "correct" place where I actually felt any kind of restriction. I ended up with 8 ccs in a 10 cc band, and I got that final fill done in August of '08. About 3 times a month, since that final fill, I would mistakenly injest something that will make me vomit. I was doing exactly what all the literature says to do, I wasn't trying to down huge servings of white bread or soda, but since my diet was so full of new things, I would mistakenly trip across healthy things that would stick above the band no matter how well I chewed them, like certain raw vegetables and whole-wheat pasta. Also, I have always had a really sensitive gag reflex, so this is only slightly more than the norm from before I had the lap-band. Anyhow, every time I'd vomit, I would revert to a liquid diet for a few days, load up on the Ibuprofren, and then gradually get back onto a regular diet, no problems. No consistent pain or anything like that, the liquid diet was more a precaution than anything, and I would always be just fine resuming a normal diet within a day or two. However, I vomited several times about 4 days ago and even with a liquid diet I've been uncomfortable (not a lot of pain, just enough so I notice it) right around the lap band. I've stuck to a liquid diet this whole time have in fact vomited up the liquids twice more in the last two days, however I'm able to keep down the majority of what I'm ingesting. I'm still relatively hydrated but definitely getting a run-down feeling from not getting enough protein/carbs/calories. My main question is: Do you think I've slipped the band? If the inital 3-times-a-month vomiting was a sign that the band had slipped, why was I okay to eat a normal diet 90% of the time inbetween the vomiting? I thought that once the band slipped you were unable to injest anything? Do you think this is a simple matter of the band being over-filled? I have an appointment with our friend the Flouroscope on Monday, so I'll know for sure at that point if the band is slipped. If it has slipped, does that automatically mean I have to have the band removed? How much is that going to cost me? I don't have a single spare cent to pay for any kind of surgery. If I can't afford the surgery, can I still function with all of the saline removed? Sorry for the long post, but I wanted to give the backstory. I'm pretty darn nervous about all of this right now and would appreciate any input I could get. Thanks so much!
×
×
  • Create New...