Life After Surgery The following identifies areas that will be important
for patients to follow after weight loss surgery.
Diet Going Back to
Work Birth
Control & Pregnancy Long-Term
Follow-Up Support
Groups
Diet The modifications
made to your gastrointestinal tract will require permanent changes in your
eating habits that must be adhered to for successful weight loss.
Post-surgery dietary guidelines will vary by surgeon. You may hear of
other patients who are given different guidelines following their weight
loss surgery. It is important to remember that every surgeon does not
perform the exact same weight loss surgery procedure and that the dietary
guidelines will be different for each surgeon and each type of procedure.
What is most important is that you adhere strictly to your surgeon's
recommended guidelines. The following are some of the generally accepted
dietary guidelines a weight loss surgery patient may encounter:
- When you start eating solid food it is
essential that you chew thoroughly. You will not be able to eat steaks
or other chunks of meat if they are not ground or chewed thoroughly.
- Don't drink fluids while eating. They will
make you feel full before you have consumed enough food.
- Omit desserts and other items with sugar
listed as one of the first three ingredients.
- Omit carbonated drinks, high-calorie
nutritional supplements, milk shakes, high-fat foods and foods with high
fiber content.
- Avoid alcohol.
- Limit snacking between meals.
Going Back to Work Your ability to resume pre-surgery levels of activity
will vary according to your physical condition, the nature of the activity
and the type of weight loss surgery you had. Many patients return to full
pre-surgery levels of activity within six weeks of their procedure.
Patients who have had a minimally invasive laparoscopic procedure may be
able to return to these activities within a few weeks.
Birth Control & Pregnancy
It is strongly advised that women
of childbearing age use the most effective forms of birth control during
the first 16 to 24 months after weight loss surgery. The added demands
pregnancy places on your body and the potential for fetal damage make this
a most important requirement.
Long-Term Follow-Up Although the short-term effects of weight loss surgery
are well understood, there are still questions to be answered about the
long-term effects on nutrition and body systems. Nutritional deficiencies
that occur over the course of many years will need to be studied. Over
time, you will need periodic checks for anemia (low red blood cell count)
and Vitamin B12, folate and iron levels. Follow-up tests will initially be
conducted every three to six months or as needed, and then every one to
two years.
Support Groups The widespread use of support groups has provided weight loss
surgery patients an excellent opportunity to discuss their various
personal and professional issues. Most learn, for example, that weight
loss surgery will not immediately resolve existing emotional issues or
heal the years of damage that morbid obesity might have inflicted on their
emotional well-being. Most surgeons have support groups in place to assist
you with short-term and long-term questions and needs. Most bariatric
surgeons who frequently perform weight loss surgery will tell you that
ongoing post-surgical support helps produce the greatest level of success
for their patients.
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