gastric bypass risks

  • human bodies are designed to thrive under conditions of fluctuating nutritional availability
  • as food-marketing becomes more and more advanced, more and more of us will become overweight
  • studies and surveys clearly show that being overweight increases our risks for developing a spectrum


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Idai Makaya discusses weight loss surgery – a new but rapid growing area in modern Western Medicine/Surgery.

Most of us are well aware of the spiralling obesity crisis which has swamped modern Britain but it is not totally clear to many of us why this is actually happening or what can be done about it. In this article I’ll look briefly into a few likely reasons for the current weight gain epidemic we are experiencing and its consequences. I’ll also explain the ins and outs of weight loss surgery (explaining what sorts of people are actually reasonable candidates for this type of drastic weight loss intervention, mainly intended as a last-ditch effort to gain control of a potentially life-threatening weight control spot). Of key importance to the discussion will be an outline of the different types of weight loss operations and the legal candidates for each surgical approach.

I often hear people pondering over why we are witnessing so many incidences of obesity in Britain and why it seems to be occurring at an increasingly younger age. This is a grand debate in government and healthcare circles as well – largely because of the enormous strain obesity-related illnesses have placed on our healthcare system. The overwhelming reason for so many cases of obesity occurring is that people are simply eating too great. You often hear reasons given for excessive weight, such as genetics and “hormonal or glandular problems” – but the experience of clinicians around the world suggests that these causes are largely obscure and apply to a negligible proportion of overweight people. The majority of overweight people simply eat more than they need to.

Before casting accusatory glances at each other it’s worth remembering that human bodies are designed to thrive under conditions of fluctuating nutritional availability – we are developed for conditions of regular food scarcity. Certain nutrients (such as sugars, fats and salts) – which we can now buy in massive quantities from supermarkets and in fast foods – were so rare in prehistoric times that we did not require the development of mechanisms to suppress our intake of these substances.

Now that we can access them cheaply and on-demand, the majority of us will naturally struggle to regulate our intake of these potentially imperfect foods. This is why, as food-marketing becomes more and more advanced, more and more of us will become overweight. It’s purely statistical – it is simply unnatural for us to have 24 hour access to calorie-rich foods and we are not designed to cope with such conditions.

Studies and surveys clearly show that being overweight increases our risks for developing a spectrum of killer diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and cancer. These diseases are the leading causes of death and ill health in this country, unsurprisingly. This was not the case before we entered into the period of relative economic prosperity we now enjoy (as compared to the 1960s and 1970s).

Having said this, with inconvenience, discipline and forward thinking, we all have the opportunity to gain control over our diets and, ultimately, our weight. It’s everyone’s responsibility to strive to do this. However, there will always be a group of people who fail to regulate their weight by any voluntary means – for various reasons (largely emotional and/or psychological) – and they will become so overweight that it threatens their physical and mental health. Such people are the main candidates for weight loss surgery.

There are a number of different weight loss surgery techniques available now and not all the techniques are suitable for all overweight patients. Patients must choose surgical options which will address their specific weight problems. This leads to the crux of this article and we must now address two pertinent questions:

  • How does one decide that weight loss surgery is, indeed, the correct solution for one’s enjoy weight problems?
  • Having made this decision, how does one then choose what type of surgery will meet one’s specific needs?

    To help with specialist input into this discussion I called on the wisdom and experience of Mr Vigyan Jain – one of South East England’s most experienced and diversified Bariatric Surgeons. Some readers will be aware that Mr Jain also took portion in the Type Two Diabetes discussion I held recently with Dr Colin Johnston, an experienced Hertfordshire Endocrinologist and Physician.

    The reason that Mr Jain was called upon in that particular discussion was to explain the impact of weight loss surgery on Type Two Diabetes. Mr Jain has witnessed a large number of overweight patients with Type Two Diabetes improve their diabetes management significantly after weight loss surgery – and many of his patients have even been able to discontinue medication for diabetes after undergoing certain types of weight loss surgery. I will expand on that finding later in this article.

    Here’s what Mr Jain thinks every weight loss surgery candidate needs to be aware of:

    Idai Makaya: Mr Jain, what are the main types of Bariatric (weight loss) surgery and how do you decide what is the best type of surgery for any particular patient?

    Vigyan Jain: The most commonly performed weight loss surgery techniques are Gastric Banding, Gastric Sleeve and Gastric Bypass surgery.

    Q. Please characterize each of these procedures, explaining their relative effectiveness and what sorts of people they would apply to.

    A. Gastric Banding is a surgical technique which involves the use of keyhole surgery to insert a small gastric band device around the stomach. The band is then inflated – so that it tightens and constricts the stomach – restricting it to about the size of a golf ball. This makes it much easier for the patient to feel full. This helps the patient to restrict food consumption and lose weight. It is best used for people who are overweight with a BMI (body mass index) above 35, but preferably below 45. BMI is a figure relating to weight to height ratio and should ideally be around 25.

    Gastric banding surgery will benefit overweight people who have failed to lose weight by other methods to lose 40-50% of their excess weight by helping them restrict their food intake. The very clear individual can sometimes lose even greater excess weight after undergoing gastric banding – if a disciplined exercise and diet strategy is adhered to additionally.

    Gastric Sleeve surgery – often called Sleeve Gastrectomy – involves keyhole surgery to cut away a portion of the stomach lengthwise and stitch it closed again (now at a powerful smaller size). So the stomach is made permanently smaller surgically (to a fifth of its original capacity) and it resembles a tube after Sleeve Gastrectomy. However, as the capacity of stomach is permanently reduced, it gives this operation added efficacy as compared to gastric banding which sometimes requires re-adjustment). Patients are usually much more successful at achieving target weight loss after gastric sleeve surgery than after gastric band surgery – without altering their capacity to eat any type/texture of food.

    Gastric sleeve surgery will suit the more overweight individual, with a BMI above 35, who has failed to lose weight through all available non-surgical means. It is far more effective at helping patients arrive their target weight alongside healthy eating and exercise habits (as compared to a gastric band).

    Gastric Bypass surgery, however, is one of the most effective types of weight loss surgery. This involves completely bypassing much of the stomach – and part of the small intestine – through a keyhole surgical technique. It suits very overweight patients with a BMI above 40. It is even more effective than gastric sleeve surgery and is regarded as the “gold standard” in weight loss surgery. Gastric bypass surgery has the most discernible impact on Type Two Diabetes management and most patients with diabetes diagnosed within the last ten years – or less – will experience complete resolution from symptoms/signs of diabetes (or significantly reduced requirement of diabetes medication). Many of my patients have stopped Type Two diabetic medication completely after bypass surgery – even some of those on insulin.

    In my experience, bypass surgery suits the majority of obese individuals who have failed to gain control of their weight after trying all the available non-surgical options. Unfortunately, not many surgeons are trained to carry out this procedure and only a few hospitals are geared to assist bypass surgery, which has led to the proliferation of gastric band clinics (offering only gastric banding to all and sundry – regardless of circumstances). This state is far from ideal. I would urge patients to consider their circumstances before undergoing weight loss surgery and I would recommend that when considering weight loss surgery patients ensure that their prospective hospital team has the following characteristics:

  • A dietetic expert to assess your eating practices.
  • A psychologist to assess if weight loss surgery is really the best option to solve your weight problems and that you are choosing the surgical option for the right reasons.
  • An endocrinologist or physician to ensure that you are not one of the few who’s weight problems have a genuine organic or glandular cause.
  • A team of surgeons with experience in carrying out a high volume of all the weight loss surgical techniques outlined above, to ensure you have choice.

Idai Makaya: Thanks Mr Jain, I consider readers will now have more than enough information to decide for themselves if (or when) Gastric Banding is really necessary.

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  • There is a natural alternative to weight loss surgery.
  • Working with this Christian weight loss program will give you the support and encouragement.
  • “With God, all things are possible,” Matthew 19:26 reminds us.


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There is a natural alternative to weight loss surgery. You can lose the weight without resorting to such drastic measures. When you are ready to take the first step towards working with a personal weight loss mentor to end your battle with obesity and transform your life, please visit, http://myhealthyweightloss.ning.com

People who are considered to be morbidly obese are fighting a life and death battle with their weight. Obesity is defined as having a body weight that exceeds the ideal body weight by more than 20%. Morbidly obese people weigh more than 100% of their ideal body weight.

Since the widespread adoption of weight loss surgery as an answer to morbid obesity, hundreds of thousands of people have gone under the knife in search of a way to quickly lose the weight and save their lives. While the thought of undergoing major surgery to have your stomach stapled in order to make losing weight easier and faster, the surgery and recovery carries inherent risks that should be considered in advance.

What is bariatric surgery?

Bariatrics is a branch of the practice of medicine that addresses obesity and its related diseases. Bariatric surgery is an umbrella term covering the various operations that make physical changes to the stomach and digestive tract in order to decrease the amount of food that you can eat.

Purpose of bariatric surgery:

  • Facilitates significant and sustained weight loss in those who are morbidly obese
  • Results in remission of diabetes in 86% of obese patients with diabetes
  • Reduces the risk of death in the morbidly obese by nearly 30%

Weight Loss surgery options:

Surgical procedures that restrict food intake:

      • Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
      • Adjustable gastric banding
      • Gastroplasty
      • Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy

      Procedures that cause food to be poorly absorbed:

      • Bilopancreatic diversion

      • Duodenal switch

      Weight loss surgery complications:

      • Gastric bypass surgery often leads to health problems from nutritional deficiencies due to the restructuring of the digestive tract.
      • “Dumping syndrome,” which includes nausea, sweating, diarrhea, chest and stomach cramps can be a horrible side effect of gastroplasty.
      • Anastomotic leak can be a deadly complication that occurs when the staples in the stomach begin to leak. This is a very rare complication.

      Alternatives to bariatric surgery:

      Losing weight is hard. There’s no denying that. People who have become morbidly obese know that they need to lose weight but they think that they are powerless to end their addiction to overeating. That is where they are mistaken. With the honest counseling and encourage, education about good nutrition and fitness anyone can completely change their lives and experience an outer and inner transformation avoiding bariatric surgery completely.

      Working with a Christian weight loss mentor will give you the benefit and encouragement that you need to grow in spirit as you heal your physical body. “With God, all things are possible,” Matthew 19:26 reminds us. When you work with a Christian weight loss idea you learn to turn all of your problems, pain and disappointment over to God, put your trust in him and faithfully commit to doing the work that will change your life. This is guaranteed to work as long as you do not give up.

      This Christian weight loss program combines the power of faith and fellowship to motivate and equip you to reach and exceed your weight loss goals with ease and joy and glory… let’s inaugurate within and win! Schedule a free consultation online at www.thehealthrevolution.us

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      I was 270 pounds when I decided to have gastric bypass surgery. I had tried dieting but I just couldn’t lose the weight. There were no surgeons in my area that performed the surgery (I live in a small town) so I had to travel to see a doctor about three hours away. I didn’t mind the drive, though; I decided it was worth it to see doctor with a lot of experience with gastric bypass surgery.

      During the first appointment with the surgeon, he told me what I would need to do prior to having the surgery. First, I had to attend an educational session at his office in which I would learn all about the gastric bypass surgery and the recovery process. Then I had to get a physical from my regular physician and an evaluation by a psychologist or psychiatrist. I guess the psych eval was to determine if I had any kind of eating disorder and if I really grasped the implications of the surgery.

      And believe me, the implications of the surgery were significant. I would have to be on a liquid diet for five days prior to the surgery and for a week after the surgery. Then I would have to be on a soft diet for four to six weeks. I would probably not be able to tolerate sugary foods or greasy foods after the operation. The surgery would purchase place in a hospital under general anesthesia, which carries a number of risks. There was a possibility, slim as it was, that I could die from the surgery.

      Anyone considering gastric bypass surgery should mediate about it carefully. I did. And I decided to go for it.

      Five days before my scheduled surgery date, I began my liquid diet. I was feeling indignant about it. The first day went just fine. The next day, I was hungry. The hunger passed in a day or two, though.

      The surgeon told me that it was important to get enough protein after the gastric bypass surgery. I’m a vegetarian, and I normally ate about 35 grams of protein a day. The surgeon said I would need to eat at least 60 grams after the surgery, so I started counting my protein grams and trying to get to 60 at the same time I started my liquid diet. I drank Adkins shakes, which have 15 grams of protein per shake. The shakes come in a variety of flavors and taste pretty good.

      The day of the surgery, I was nervous. Everything ran like clockwork, though. I had to be at the hospital at 6:00 am, so my partner and I drove to the city the day before and stayed overnight in a hotel. When I got to the hospital, a nurse started an IV and gave me some medication to relax me and some other medication to prevent nausea after the operation. I was shocked I would get sick from the anesthesia, but that didn’t happen.

      As soon as they took me into the operating room, they put something in my IV to put me to sleep. A couple of hours later, I woke up in the recovery room. They gave me some ice chips and soon they took me up to my room.

      I was in the hospital for only one night. I was on a liquid diet while I was there, of course. They gave me diluted juice and popsicles. They also brought me some chicken broth, but I sent that away since I don’t eat meat.

      Shortly after the operation, a nurse helped me get out of bed and walk down the hall a shrimp ways. It’s important to get moving as soon as you can in order to prevent blood clots from forming in your legs. It also gets the blood circulating and helps you recover faster.

      My stomach was sore but they gave me pain medication and the pain was bearable. The next day I went home.

      I was on a liquid diet for the next week or so. I had a hard time getting enough protein. The Adkins shakes now tasted too sweet for me. They had given me a different kind of protein drink in the hospital, something called Cyto-sport. It was similar to Gatorade, but had a obnoxious aftertaste. I eventually bought some at GNC, and they were expensive, but I ended up throwing most of them out. They just tasted too bad, and I craved water and juice.

      In about a week, I had a follow up appointment with my surgeon. I also met with a dietician at his office. She told me I could start on a soft diet, and stressed the need to get enough protein.

      The protein thing was a problem for me, and it continues to be. I ate protein for nearly every meal, which was a big change for me. I bought shredded cheese and added it to everything to give it extra protein. I ate string cheese for a snack. I ate a lot of yogurt. Cheese omelets were a big hit. I counted my calories and my protein grams religiously. I ate about 400-500 calories a day. I got 40 or 50 grams of protein if I was lucky.

      About a week after my surgery, my incision began to drain. I woke up in the middle of the night and my tee shirt was soaked. I was afraid the incision was infected and scheduled an appointment to see the surgeon. He told me the wound was not infected and that the drainage I was having was normal. He said it was liquefied fat cells. That sounded weird to me, but he was the doctor, so I went home and just kept dressings over the draining injure.

      I had a lot of nausea after the surgery. It continues for several weeks. First the surgeon told me I had a stomach virus. Then, when it didn’t go away, he said it was because I wasn’t eating enough protein. A couple of weeks after the gastric bypass surgery, I went to the emergency room because I just couldn’t keep anything down. They gave me IV fluids, medication for nausea, and told me that my wound was infected. I had also been short of breath since shortly after the surgery, so they did a chest x-ray and told me I had pneumonia. They sent me home with antibiotics.

      Now, I believe I got the pneumonia while I was in the hospital after the gastric bypass surgery. There’s really no way to know for distinct, but hospitals are full of germs and pneumonia is a fairly common complication after any surgery.

      A week or two passed, and the nausea continued to be a quandary. I was also getting more and more short of breath. I went attend to the ER, and they admitted me for pneumonia. Apparently my left lung was in bad shape. A lot of fluid had accumulated around the lung. They ended up having to do surgery to clean out the infected fluid; it was too clotted to drain out without surgery. It turned out that I was in the hospital for nearly three weeks. For several days, I was in the intensive care unit on a respirator.

      What does that have to do with my gastric bypass surgery, you might ask. Well, first of all, I believe I contracted the pneumonia in the hospital where I had the surgery. Next, I visited the surgeon a couple of times while I was sick and he never caught the pneumonia. Finally, I beget it greatly increased my recovery time from the gastric bypass surgery. I was expecting to be serve on my feet a couple of weeks after the surgery, and instead I was tired and weak for three months.

      So would I have the gastric bypass surgery again? Yeah, I would. It’s just over three months since the surgery, and I’ve lost 63 pounds. My clothes are all loose, and I love it. The nausea has mostly passed, although it does come back at times (and I’m still only eating 40-50 grams of protein).

      I’m not sure if I would recommend it to other people or not. I guess it depends on the person. I would certainly recommend they consider it carefully before committing. Yet, despite the problems I’ve had, I view it as something positive in my life.

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      Bariatric Surgery is derived from the Greek words “weight” and “treatment”. Bariatric Surgeries are major gastrointestinal operations that seal off most of the stomach to reduce the amount of food one can eat and they rearrange the small intestine to reduce the calories the bodies can absorb. Weight loss operations fall into three categories. The first category is the Restrictive procedures make the stomach smaller to limit the amount of food intake. The second category is the Malabsorptive techniques reduce the amount of intestine that comes in contact with food so that the body absorbs fewer calories and the third category is a combination of the operations that employ both restriction and malabsorption.

      There are several different types of Bariatric weight loss surgical procedures, but they are all collectively known as “bariatric surgery”. The surgical procedures fall into two categories which are Restrictive Operations and Gastric Bypass Operations. The two Restrictive Operations are known as Gastric Banding (Lap-Band) and Vertical Banded Gastroplasty. Gastric Bypass Operations include Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass and DISTAL Gastric Bypass.

      The Gastric Banding procedure performed by introducing a Gastric Band device through tiny incisions in the abdomen and it is then placed around the upper part of the stomach. The resulting pouch dramatically reduces the functional capacity of the stomach. The band has a balloon from inside that is adjustable and can reduce stoma size. This prolongs the periods of fullness. The operation is performed under general anesthesia and lasts between thirty minutes to one hour. The Gastric Banding procedure has many advantages including no cutting of the stomach, no stapling of the stomach, calibrated pouch and stoma size, it can be adjusted to patients needs after surgery with no operation to adjust stoma, laparoscopic removal is possible, it is fully reversible and there is a short hospital stay following the blueprint that does not exceed 48 hours.

      The Vertical Banded Gastroplasty (VBG) is done by making an incision in the upper abdomen that measures several inches. A circular window is made through the stomach a few inches below the esophagus. A surgical stapler is used to create a small vertical pouch by putting a row of staples from window toward the esophagus. The pouch is carefully measured at the time of the surgery and will hold about one tablespoon of solid food. The next step involves a polypropylene band being placed through the window around the outlet of the pouch and it is secured to itself with stitches. The band controls the size of the outlet and keeps it from stretching. VBG limits the amount of food a patient can eat at one time. It works solely by restricting the amount a patient can eat, unlike the Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass. The procedure is performed under general anesthesia and requires four or five days in the hospital.

      The Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass is the most common Gastric Bypass Surgery. The stomach is made smaller by creating a small pouch at the top of the stomach using surgical staples or a plastic band. The smaller stomach is connected directly to the middle of the piece of small intestine, bypassing the rest of the stomach and upper portion of the small intestine. This blueprint requires a four to six day finish in the hospital or two to three days for the laparoscopic procedure. It is possible to return to normal activity three to five weeks after the surgery.

      The DISTAL Gastric Bypass is performed by removing a portion of the stomach. The remaining small pouch is directly connected to the last fragment of the small intestine. There is a risk of nutritional deficiencies with this plot. The procedure is intended for patients who are more than 200 pounds overweight. The operation adds malabsorption to restriction of intake. The stomach stapling component is the same as the standard procedure, the difference is the location of the distal connection of the intestine which is reconnected much closer to the colon.
      Patients generally have more success with the Gastric Bypass Operations than the Restrictive procedures. The risks are similar for both the Gastric Bypass Operations and the Restrictive procedures, although the risk of nutritional deficiencies for iron, calcium and vitamin B-12 are higher in patients who undergo Gastric Bypass operations. There is also a risk of intestinal leaking. There is a possibility of the Gastric Bypass operations causing “dumping syndrome”. This is when food moves too fast through the small intestine. This causes nausea, weakness, sweating, faintness and sometimes diarrhea.

      In 2003, 103,000 weight loss operations were performed. Every year that number increases. More and more people are using bariatric surgeries to deal with obesity. Although it seems like a fast way to lose weight the risks need to be carefully evaluated.

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      For James Hough, the decision to have a gastric bypass came one day when he fell – and couldn’t get up. His wife had to help him up off his hands and knees. At almost 300 pounds, Hough simply couldn’t do it. “I had been thinking about having the surgery, and this really made me determine to go ahead with it,” said the Prunedale, California, husband and father, who weighed 292 at his heaviest. Now, two years later, he has lost more than half of that, and weighs just 142 pounds.

      The operation has been life-changing for Hough in several ways. Not only is he much thinner, he no longer has diabetes or sleep apnea, both conditions which can be very serious in their impact on health.

      Also, Hough notes, he no longer needs glasses except for reading.

      “When I was diabetic, my glasses were definitely needed for reading and distance,” said Hough, an IT manager for a Salinas, California, medical clinic. “After losing the weight, my vision cleared up. Apparently, the excess weight made my cornea out of shape and thus (caused) poor vision.”

      Hough is a very good example of how gastric bypass can have a dramatic impact for better health, said his surgeon, Dr. Mark Vierra of Monterey, California.

      “James has really gotten it,” said Dr. Vierra, a gastrointestinal surgeon who has performed more than 800 bariatric surgeries since 2001. “He’s done everything absolutely right and is getting the benefits from it.”

      Bariatric, or weight-loss surgery, is becoming more commonly performed as obesity has become more common in the United States.

      Smooth, it’s a serious measure to grasp for the sake of health, and one that should be considered only as a last resort.

      “The risks of any surgery for anyone overweight enough to be thinking about weight-loss surgery are much greater than the risks for someone of normal weight,” said Dr. Vierra. Some of these risks include blood clots and intestinal obstructions.

      Therefore, a gastric bypass must be deemed a medical necessity. Typically, the patient must be 100 pounds or more over his or her ideal weight, and likely is suffering ill effects from being obese, such as diabetes, severe degenerative joint disease or sleep apnea.

      There are two procedures commonly done these days, Vierra said: laparoscopic gastric bypass, and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding. There are several other types that are done less frequently, including Roux Y gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, and duodenal switch.

      Laparoscopic procedures are done with a very small incision, letting patients heal more quickly and with fewer complications.

      In a laproscopic gastric bypass, the stomach is divided to create a small upper pouch the size of a thumb. The new stomach is then sewn to the small intestine. Digestion and absorption are virtually normal but patients can’t eat as great because they have a great smaller stomach to hold food.

      In laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding, an inflatable cuff is placed around the upper stomach, which can be inflated or deflated as needed in the office to either tighten the band or to loosen it.

      While on the faculty at Stanford University, Dr. Vierra specialized in gastrointestinal surgery and had an interest in complicated cases. He was especially struck by patients who had regained weight following reversal of traditional weight-loss surgery, and how this weight gain affected their health and quality of life.

      He began doing gastric bypasses at Stanford in the early 1990s.

      “At that time there was no such program at Stanford, so I put together a team with a fantastic nurse, a dietician and a psychologist, a group of anesthesiologists and some very patient colleagues, and we began doing gastric bypasses,” Dr. Vierra recalls. “At that time there were very few surgeons performing this type of surgery and it had a somewhat shady reputation.”

      He started developing the less invasive laproscopic techniques a few years later, urged by a patient to do her gastric bypass that procedure, “and with that I became one of the first surgeons in the world to initiate doing weight-loss surgery by laparoscopy.”

      After moving to Monterey seven years ago with his family, Dr. Vierra put together a program at Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula, which was among the first centers on the West Coast to be designated a Center of Excellence by the American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

      Patients seeking weight-loss surgery must first undergo a battery of tests to determine their overall health, both physical and mental. In addition to being at least 100 pounds overweight, they must have also tried to lose weight in the past without success.

      Hough’s history fit right into this profile. “I fought my weight all my life,” said Hough, 56. After retiring from the military in 1993, Hough’s weight increased steadily, and although he tried to diet and be more active, nothing seemed to work.

      But weight-loss surgery did the trick, and Hough said he couldn’t be more blissful.

      “People literally don’t observe me,” he chuckles.

      It took between nine and ten months for Hough to lose 150 pounds, and in addition to the surgery, he’s made some lifestyle modifications.

      Both Hough and Dr. Vierra emphasize that weight-loss surgery isn’t the end, but the beginning of a new way of life. Patients must assume care to eat smaller amounts of food at each sitting, to comply with their reduced stomachs. They may need to capture vitamin and mineral supplements to head off any deficiencies that may occur as a result of the surgery.

      “I discourage anyone from ever imagining that their weight problem is cured – it is only in remission,” said Dr. Vierra.

      Support groups are available to offer tips and friendship to gastric bypass patients, and aftercare is an important consideration for the rest of their lives. Dr. Vierra’s patients must agree to followup appointments for at least five years.

      “You have to use it as a tool,” said Hough. “It’s a lifestyle change. Success is going to beget on how you change your attitude.”

      Hough now keeps active by walking, riding mountain bikes, backpacking and scuba diving – activities that would have been difficult or impossible for his used self.

      Hough said he’s glad he had the surgery: “I’d do it again this afternoon.”

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