Duodenal Switch

I would like to share my personal post-op experiences, fact based knowledge and background regarding my surgery which is a combination of the Vertical Sleeve Gastrectomy (VSG) and Duodenal Switch (DS), performed under 1 surgical procedure. It is medically known as a a gastric restriction with partial gastrectomy, pylorus-preserving duodenoileostomy and ileoileostomy to limit absorption. It is known by its formality as a bilio-pancreatic diversion with duodenal switch and abbreviated as BPD/DS or DS. A not so wordy way to say it is sleeve gastrectomy with duodenal switch or just the DS.

I had my laparoscopic duodenal switch procedure on Nov 14th, 2006 for the surgical medical treatment of morbid obesity that can kill you. I am still the same person within, only my outer shell has morph to what I once looked like before this disease imprisoned me. The most important thing that matters is, I have my health back and that means more to me than the actual weight loss.

What is your body if you are not healthy with your respiratory, circulatory, cardiac and digestive system working properly and have mobility to be able to do things on your own, independently with no limitations, no complications or becoming a fatality?

This is what bariatric surgery outcome has done for me, give me my health as well as my life back!

The Duodenal Switch (DS)

The DS procedure has been performed since 1988 and combines restrictive and malabsorptive elements to help achieve and maintain long-term weight loss:

1. by restricting the amount of food that can be eaten through a reduction in stomach size

2. limit the amount of food that is absorbed into the body through a rerouting of the intestines

3. have a metabolic effect induced by manipulating intestinal hormones as a result of intestinal rerouting

The overall effect is that DS patients are able to engage in fairly normal, free eating, while having the benefit of taking on the metabolism of a lean individual.

Wednesday, February 18, 2004

Microscopic Colitis

I have been diagnosed with 2 intestinal disorders. One is known as Microscopic Colitis in which I have had severe, uncontrollable and volatile watery diarrhea. I have severe abdominal bloating, fatigue and body aches, stomach quadrants sensitivity, super morbid obesity (BMI=50+) and lack agility. The diarrhea comes in sudden bouts, giving only seconds of warning. There does not seem to be a consistent dietary factor contributing to these types of diarrheal episodes.

After many tests performed and visits to the ER, not one MD referred a biopsy be performed for microscopic colitis because it is the least familiar to doctors. I just learned that the inflammation causing this within the intestine is of cellular level and can ONLY BE DETECTED with a microscope. I guess that is why my results returned as normal. The MDs always diagnosed as IBS – early and late dumping syndrome, but I always felt something was being overlooked and it has severely impaired my quality of life.

Living with unpredictable and volatile chronic diarrhea has been an ordeal, physically and mentally and has become very disabling. Without warning and within seconds of a first few bites, I have to go immediately and it cannot be held because the abdominal pain is very severe, becomes an ambulatory challenge and a paralyzing struggle. There were times that I do not eat, were outside and the attack occur without forewarning and incapable to find a bathroom to run quickly to. It cannot be held and waiting to search for a bathroom, the diarrhea cannot be controlled and forces out, although I try my best to control it to not expel. I live my life trying to figure out where all the restrooms of each place I go are located and pray when the attack arises that no one is in the bathroom. The "dump action" is very explosive and so loud it booms and NOT ONE BIT AMUSING.

It has caused me trauma, anxiety, panic attacks, agoraphobia and depression. I have taken Pepto Bismol and Imodium to calm the episodes, but it is temporary and doesn't help all the time, therefore these are not remedies. Hence, if I am nervous or stressed, these diarrhea assault will also occur, even on an unfilled stomach.

To prevent dehydration, I drink an average of 64 oz of water per day. For years, I avoided sugar, fats, sweet, chocolate and other things that might cause an incident, but usually anything I eat will get eliminated immediately, so it doesn't matter what type of food it is. Diet programs have not been successful for my state due to the diarrhea causing weight loss and regain and diet pill cannot be tolerated and has made me ill.

Since the stomach pouch after a gastric bypass roux-en-y surgery is small, I do not assume that this type of impulsive diarrhea that I have experienced will transpire. I understand that with a RNY, the dumping side effect is assumed milder than the unmanageable chronic symptoms I have now. I am hoping that a RNY gastric bypass surgical treatment will help as a mechanism and that the dumping would not be as devastating as it is now. The diarrhea causes me to lose weight quickly and then regain more than previously. RNY would help as a weight loss tool to reclaim my health back to normal level.

The chronic diarrhea and morbid obesity has been demanding, extremely traumatic and detrimental to my body. I know if I do not have gastric bypass RNY surgery to fix and treat my illness, I will eventually die.

WT = 284 lbs
BMI = 51.9

I have now lost a grand total of 21 lbs since Nov 2003. But, eventually, as always, I will gain it back and then some. My weight fluctuates due to this diarrhea condition. I have been a careful eater and very aware of my intake. I have always been on a low fat plan and currently counting carbohydrates as an eating lifestyle, along with my regular drinking of 2 quarts of water per day.