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CarolineDC

LAP-BAND Patients
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Posts posted by CarolineDC


  1. I've been a slow loser, and I definitely identify with what y'all are saying. I was self-pay, so there's been an element of kicking myself -- "Did I seriously spend thousands and thousands of dollars for another failed diet?!" I got the Realize band; my fill nurse and other nurses at the surgeon's office told me that in their experience, people with the Realize band take longer to get to the sweet spot, but then lose at about the same rate as people with the Lap-Band. This has definitely been true for me. I was staying away from the boards and feeling a lot of guilt and fear for several months after my surgery. I did not feel significant restriction, early satiety, or appetite suppression until about six months after my surgery! My 11 cc band had 9.2 cc in it before I felt like I had a band. Now that I've FINALLY got good restriction, I am getting all those benefits, and my weight loss is speeding up.

    Meli, I love what you wrote about weight loss being a marathon, not a sprint. We're in this for life, not for a quick year or two. I have to remind myself sometimes that i's not a race!


  2. I can totally sympathize with your post. I also have the Realize band, and at 6.5 cc, I had no restriction. I was really discouraged. It was about three months after my surgery -- and about 9 cc in the band -- before I really felt good restriction, and I'm still not at my sweet spot. But I'm definitely feeling it! I just had a talk today with my doctor's nurse, who told me that they've noticed it takes a little longer for Realize patients to get really good restriction, but once they get there, they take off and do great. Try not to get too discouraged. I know how hard it is, but you're still early in the process. It's hard to remember that the surgery alone doesn't give you the benefit of the band; most people don't have much (or any) restriction before they get their fills, and I've heard many, many people say that they didn't feel any restriction until very close to their sweet spot. We just have to hang in there, keep working the band, and stick it out. You're gonna get there!! :unsure:


  3. I'm going in for a check in a couple of days. The nurse told me to call and come back in if I could eat more than a cup of food at a time. I can definitely eat more than that, though I'm trying not to. She did say that if I didn't feel good restriction after the most recent fill, or if it didn't last, she would want to check whether I have a slow leak.


  4. I had my surgery on June 12 (11 CC Realize band). My first fill was in mid-July. I've had three fills total, and the nurse has put 8.5 cc total into my band, but at my second and third fills, she couldn't draw back out as much as I should have in there. At my last fill she could only draw back out 7 cc.

    Is this within the range of normal? Can 1.5 cc be "hiding" in the tubing?

    I'm definitely feeling less restriction now than I did a week after my most recent fill. Hoping I don't have a leak. Any thoughts? Thanks!


  5. Thanks for the replies. My doctor doesn't give an antacid for post-op; they told me to take something over-the-counter, and that took care of it. I had liquids today and was fine.

    Peas... man, I specifically asked the dietitian from my surgeon's office whether they would be too tough to eat. That's disappointing, because I love field peas. Hopefully I'll be able to eat them later on.


  6. I had my surgery on June 12, so I am currently 13 days post-op. For the first 10 days, I was on liquids only and did fine. I developed a seroma, which is putting pressure on my port incision. On 10 days post-op, I had a check-up appointment with my doctor and dietitian. I told them I hadn't really been hungry since surgery, and dietitian thought maybe the swelling from surgery and the seroma was making me tighter than usual. Her recommendation was to start mushies slowly with applesauce-consistency foods, 1/8 cup at a time.

    I followed those instructions for about a day and a half, and then I started to have reflux after eating. Called the doctor's office, and the nurse said she thought it was probably some smashed peas that irritated my esophagus/stomach OR residual swelling from surgery. Recommended that I go back to liquids for a couple of days and then try again.

    I never had reflux before surgery. Did any of you have new reflux BEFORE getting your first fill, and what do you think caused it? Did it go away? :bored:


  7. It's a little bit labor intensive, but if you're interested and have time, you can make seitan at home. People sometimes call it "wheat meat" because it has a meaty-like texture and can be seasoned to taste like chicken or beef. If you haven't had it, don't let the appearance throw you; seitan can be really tasty, and it has about 8 grams of Protein per ounce. There are lots of recipes online; we've made the one from Vegan With a Vengeance, and it turned out good.


  8. I've been a vegetarian in the past, and now I eat a primarily vegetarian diet, but I do eat fish occasionally. I'm not seeing why being a vegetarian would be a problem; if it's too hard to get enough Protein from the small amounts of vegetarian food you can eat with good restriction, you can always supplement with a Protein shake. Is it possible that your nutritionist isn't very educated about vegetarian diets? Just like meat-eaters, some veg*ns have a healthy diet and others don't.

    Just thinking this out...

    1/2 c tofu scrambler for breakfast: 9 g Protein

    1/2 c black Beans w/1 tbsp LF sour cream: 8.5 g protein

    8 oz skim milk: 8 g protein

    1/2 c quinoa: 12 g protein

    OK, so that's 37.5 grams of protein and about 680 calories.

    Add a Protein Shake and get up to about 57 grams, 840 calories.

    The protein goal I got from my dietitian was 50 g/day, so I could easily meet that goal with the off-the-top-of-my-head diet I laid out here, right?


  9. I chose the Realize band after my consult with the surgeon and doing some research at home. I liked the shape and the low-profile port, as well as the idea of the port attachment prongs. I wonder if those prongs make any difference post-op? I know everybody is sore around the port, but I think I might actually have tweaked the port funny yesterday. I had a sharp pain as I rolled over, and today I have a fresh bruise and new swelling around my port. I can just imagine those little teeth biting into my muscle all over again, and I wonder if that happens with the stitches that are used to secure the Lap-Band port. Even if this isn't something that would happen with the Lap-Band, I would still choose Realize again. I really like that smaller port.

    I think there are getting to be more and more Realize people here as more Realize bands are used in this country.


  10. Good luck to everybody whose surgery is coming up soon! Gonna do great!

    I've set my first mini-goal. Before the band, this would have been a major goal! I'm looking forward to losing 48 pounds, which will put me at my previous "high" -- you know, the weight where I went "Oh my goodness! How did this happen?! I'm losing this weight!" Lost forty of it, then gained eighty back... y'all know the story, right? I'm 17.5 pounds down from my highest weight, so that puts me only 30 pounds away from my mini-goal! I think when I reach that weight, I'll do my first set of progress pics.

    How's everybody else doing today?


  11. jtoler -- sounds like you're doing great! Good luck on the 17th!

    For the post-op people, how much were you moving around 3 days after surgery? I'm still pretty sore and need help to get out of bed. I can get up and down from a chair, but up from the bed is painful. I did it yesterday morning by myself, but it increased my pain quite a bit. Definitely feeling better this morning than yesterday morning, though.


  12. As long as you are flexible with some of the minor cultural differences (being told something will happen at a given time and it not, or taking a few hours to see the doctor) then you will have an amazing experience in Monterrey.

    I think we have the cultural quality here in Illinois, too. :blink: Lots of "hurry up and wait" for me yesterday.


  13. I lost about six pounds (mostly Water, I'm sure) during the first week of my pre-op diet, and then I plateaued. I haven't lost anything during the second week of my pre-op diet (surgery is tomorrow), and it's making me worry that maybe I won't lose after the band, either. I've stuck to the diet, and I can't figure out how I've cut my calorie intake so much and haven't lost. How is that possible? I keep track of calories, so I know I'm staying in my target range. Any thoughts?


  14. Just thought I'd update this thread in case other people happen upon it later and decide we all perished from the pre-op diet!

    I started feeling better within a few days. My pre-op diet includes one solid snack per day, and I discovered that if I eat the solid snack earlier in the day (instead of saving it for night time), I feel better. I hope everybody else is feeling a little better by now, too!


  15. I guess I never gave it a second thought. My partner & I are just that - partners. We act as any other couple act. We show up together, ask questions regarding the procedures, laugh, she tells embarrassing stories about me & etc...I never felt the need to announce it or hide it, but the pregnancy test cracked us up too. It shouldn't make one bit of difference to your doctor or the staff. If you get the "I hate homo" vibe there are plenty of other places to spend your money.

    That's my philosophy, too. It comes up with doctors when they assume that because I'm a mom, I gave birth (I didn't; my partner did), or when they ask about my plans for birth control, or when they ask if I'm married.

    Those pregnancy tests are SOP; they can't risk operating on a pregnant woman and causing a pregnancy loss. It has nothing to do with you personally.

    And yeah, if I came out to a professional who couldn't be professional knowing I was gay, I'd fire the person and find somebody else. But that's a privilege I have, because I live in a place where it's not socially acceptable for doctors to mistreat patients because they are LGBT. I know not everybody can just walk away from a doctor.

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