I get a lot of messages from people on OH asking me to update my blog and wanting to know how I am and what is the latest on me. I guess, the only thing I have to say is, I am not like certain people that wake up every single morning thinking and talking about their WLS. It is not on my mind constantly or in my thoughts for topic every day 24/7. Although, I am just beginning my journey with only 6 months into it, I don't check the scale obssessively and I only think about the surgery only when I have to eat something and hope it digest well or remember to take my vitamins and supplements.
To me, WLS is like any other surgery. It was done for a specific medical purpose to help me regain my health. It is like having your appendix, tonsils or a tumor removed, surgically correcting a problem with one of your vital organs within or having reconstructive surgery such as an abdominalplasty or breast lift/repair. It is just another surgery to me to improve your health and life moves on. I don't talk about the surgery at all. If I need advice, have a question or am having a certain concern, I have 4 very close friends that had WLS and are all over 3+ years post-op that I can count on being my mentors. Beyond that, I don't talk with them about WLS, unless it is a topic of concern. That is the way I am.
I know some live every breath talking about it, even for years, but not me. I don't talk about my other surgeries, so why would I talk about this one. Just common sense to me. That is the way I feel about it. I will write on this blog about certain events that relates to my experiences having it since the 1st year is the one with the most impact from it. But honestly, I don't put much thought as to living as a post-op. I am living as a person, who had bariatric surgery to improve and help me with my health and one benefit from it was weight loss. But, I don't brag about it or push it on people saying, hey I had wls, blah, blah, blah.
So, it has been 6 months since I had the surgery. All I can say is, I live for life. It has been one of the many surgeries I have had throughout the years that help me improved my health. Like I said, I have had other surgeries and this one happens to be one of them. The surgery help me improve my health, since my life was getting limited and pretty bad as time was going by.
I no longer using the CPAP machine or wear a Darth Vader mask, eventhough, I upgraded last year to a nasal pillow mask known as Adam Circuit. But, I don't use the Cpap or mask anymore. I give credit to that to having bariatric surgery since it help take off some weight off my tiny body that was crushing my lungs and respiratory system with the weight I had on me. I've suffered from severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with 110 apneic episodes which is extremely serious and dangerous, at a CPAP setting of 12. But, no more. I still have a collapsed oropharynx and hypopharynx that needs surgery to repair it. But, I don't want anymore surgeries, especially done to my throat, having them slice it open and digging in there leaving me a huge scar on my throat. I have been through hell with so many surgeries performed on me. I had abdominalplasty in which they stretched my skin down like a window blind to remove the scars on my stomach and repaired my stomach muscles, a few years back. I won't get into that or the details. Just wanted to say, I had reconstructive surgery which was abdominalplasty. I am just glad to be alive, breathe this free air and appreciate life for what it has to offer.
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.