Those who undergo or contemplate bariatric surgery do so essentially as a second chance at life. I mean that the severely obese man or woman feels that he (or she) has lost out in life on multiple fronts. Here are a few examples:
Loss of body contour/beauty: you can’t forget how you were once before the fat started piling on.
Poor self image: you hate the thing you see in the mirror.
Poor quality of life: you can’t dance, surf, skip, run or walk without some kind of pain or discomfort. Going up one floor makes you breathless. You avoid holidays where you would need to walk, especially on hilly terrain.
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In the last two decades or so, people have recognised (mistakenly, as you will see) that surgery for weight loss means liposuction. It has become a tiresome but necessary ritual for us to explain to our patients that what we do is bariatric surgery, not liposuction. Liposuction is local removal of subcutaneous fat from a [...]
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Weight loss after the lap gastric bypass is a well known fact. What is less known is that there is a certain degree of weight regain in some patients in the long term. Before we proceed, do you know what is a lap gastric bypass all about? An important factor to be considered by every [...]
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Weight loss plateaus may occur in certain patients who have undergone a sleeve gastrectomy as a primary bariatric procedure. What are the causes? What is the next step? What is the prognosis for these patients? This article discusses these issues. Please buckle your seat belts! First things first, who doesn’t know what a sleeve (as [...]
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