as for me, let me give you some update, since i was very much in pain to post and what not.
i was told to be at the 3rd floor OR waiting room at 5:30, sat at that desk, update whatever and was on the phone with my 3yr post-op best friend from Tx when at 6:45a was called to go to that holding area. from there went with Dr. Inabnet and the anesthesologist to the OR room. every one there was great with me. my surgery lasted 5 hours and have 7 incisional holes. the liver biospy was done and was at the recovery room at 1:30.
man, did i have pain like hell and was also on cpap machine. they got me up 4 1/2 hours later at 6pm to walk around. i was then sent to the 7th floor icu step down. still pain within was HORRIBLE and was on morphine pump every 6 mins. they also kept giving me heparin to prevent blood clots. i was also on potassium choride. my heart rate alarm was going off constantly but controllable, my respiration kept falling below 9, but that was also controllable. I was taken off the morphine on wednesday and taking lortab. that meds made me very sick, actually gave me fevers and felt like throwing up. in the morning, i was changed to Vicodin, had to crush it and it is very chalk and terrible tasting. on thursday i was transferred to a regular room. i walked at all hours that i can with the pain in my abdomen. on friday, my vitals were good and able to go home and left at 5pm.
regarding food, can't handle jello, puree chicken or turkey. i was able to drink aliitle bit of milk, puree sweet potato, applesauce and cream of wheat went done very well. mashed potato found to be alittle too harsh for me. at home, taking it slowly, soups, puree salmon and axelrod strawberry banana yogurt has been my best friend so far. it takes me a full day to eat 8oz of it, but it is good for me. drink as much water as i can. i am now off the vicodin since my pain is bearable and taking it one day at a time. hope you are doing well.
i have since surgery 11/14 lost a total as this date 11/22 9 lbs.
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.
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.