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Changes Resulting From Gastric Bypass Surgery

There are significant changes that can come about after gastric bypass surgery and it is critical that you know what the odds are if you are seriously thinking about going through with it. These changes are usually dependent on individual differences; how the body reacts to or goes through any procedure varies from one person to another. This is primarily the reason why you ought to be thoroughly informed about gastric bypass and how it works. If you know how to maximize its effect, you can lose more weight faster. Otherwise, you can end up losing weight very slowly or worse still, can even hold on to your present weight.

 

How It Works

In gastric bypass surgery, the surgeon actually reduces the size of your stomach. This organ is quite flexible, stretching readily to accommodate the amount of food you consume. As a result, it enables you to eat more and thus gain weight. After having gastric bypass surgery, your shrunk stomach can only hold small portions of food at a time, so you begin losing weight. Your stomach is not removed by this surgical operation, but splits it into two letting you to feel fuller faster with just a small amount of food intake.

Immediately after the surgery you will pass through a certain period on just a liquid diet. This is to allow your stomach to undergo healing process before it is given sold food again. In most people this period may last for about a week, in some it is shorter and in others may be even longer. Gradually you get to eat more and more solid foods and eventually you will be able to go back to regular foods again. But you will come to see that your food intake is lower than what you were used to before undergoing the gastric bypass.

Furthermore, you will realize that there is a need for you to eat more frequently during the day, though your intake is remarkably small each time you eat. You may have a piece of fruit which may be followed after a while with a few slices of bread. Most probably you will not be able to sit down for a meal with 8 courses or so. However, eating a healthy balanced diet is of paramount importance. Basically unhealthy foods including those with high trans fat content are not good for you, as your body will not be getting enough proper nutrients to strengthen its muscles. Bear in mind that your food consumption will be significantly less so you need to give your body its daily requirements to maintain a healthy lifestyle.

Gastric bypass surgery definitely alters your life. Some individuals can lose about 60-80% of their extra weight by strictly adhering to the lifestyle resulting from this operation. Even if it is a seemingly difficult and demanding process, rewards are usually achieved.

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Gastric Bypass Nutrition News

Sydney's appetite for reduction

WEIGHT loss surgery has tripled in five years and western Sydney is at the heart of the trend.

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K-State Professor Using Snack Cake Diet to Counter Popular Health Beliefs

MANHATTAN, Kan., Sept. 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A monthlong diet of entirely snack cakes and fatty foods may sound like a fantasy, but for one Kansas State University professor it's serious business. In 30 days Mark Haub is attempting to prove some common beliefs about nutrition are untrue. Haub, professor of human nutrition, teaches an obesity-related, energy balance course that sparked his ...

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Surgery through the belly button

A medical-device company in North Carolina and bariatric surgeon Dr. Brian B. Quebbemann of Newport Beach, Calif., have teamed up for weight-loss surgery requiring just one incision. The operation was the first time a surgeon has used a new Spider surgical tool for an increasingly frequent form of bariatric surgery that cuts the stomach down to 20 percent of its normal capacity, Quebbemann said.

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Obesity isn't that simple

Barely a week passes without some expert or another advising us that this or that NHS procedure is unaffordable and should be restricted.

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Obesity Surgery Up Tenfold In England

The number of NHS operations for bariatric or weight loss surgery has increased tenfold in England since 2000 say researchers, who suggest the main reason is because obese patients are more aware of it as a viable treatment option. Researchers at Imperial College London conducted their observational population cohort study, which covered all the people who had a first elective bariatric ...

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