Life After Lapband Surgery
Life after lap band surgery:
The main reason for Lap band surgery is unbalanced diet and excess eating of unhygienic food. There is no proper care for the health which leads to Lap band surgery. The risk factors and contributory causes of obesity – a disease of excess body fat characterized by a body mass index of 30+ – include a range of well-documented genetic and environmental factors. But the relative effect of these causes on the development of obesity remains unclear. Before examining possible causes, note that obesity, especially severe clinical obesity like morbid or malignant obesity, carries greater risks of morbidity and premature mortality than simple overweight.
After the surgery when you are ready to leave the hospital, you may receive a visit from the hospital dietitian who will go over the required diet for Lap-Band patients. It’s important to fully understand the Lap-Band diet before you decide on this type of weight loss surgery. The first 3 to 4 days following Adjustable Gastric Lap-Band surgery patients must follow a clear liquid diet. Failure to follow the prescribed diet can cause complications such as band erosion or slippage that require additional surgery.
If you are a regular coffee, tea, or soda drinker you should be aware that no caffeine is permitted for the first three months after surgery. Carbonated beverages; both diet and regular may cause gas, bloating, and an increase in stomach size due to the carbonation and are not recommended at any time for Lap-Band patients.
Lap-Band diet consists of 5 to 6 weeks of a modified full liquid diet; such as soup, baby food, or sugar-free gelatin three times a day.
The basic foods on the Lap-Band diet include meats or other forms of protein, vegetables, and salads. The Lap-Band diet does not include most bread, potatoes and other starchy vegetables. The length of these phases may be altered according a patient’s personal weight and weight loss goals
Protein is especially important following Lap-Band surgery. After Lap-Band surgery the stomach will never hold more than 4 to 6 ounces per meal, so making every bite count is essential for healthy and nutritionally rounded weight loss success.
Lap-Band patients are advised to consume fifty to sixty grams of protein daily to avoid protein deficiency. A lack of adequate protein may also lead to depression, anxiety, irritability, apathy, and other mental health conditions, as well as cause a number of physical health issues from gallstones to colds, headaches, low blood pressure, anemia, irregular hear rates, and, in extreme cases, death. A lab can measure the amount of protein in your blood by performing a serum albumin blood test.
Certain foods may never be well tolerated by Lap-Band patients. These foods include:
Meats that is especially tough such as steak and pork chops. Oranges and grapefruits may not be tolerated, high fiber vegetables such as celery and sweet potatoes, spicy foods, fried foods.
If you are unable to tolerate milk, it’s important to add other calcium and protein rich foods such as cottage cheese. Dry milk can be added to foods for added protein.
Any medicine you take may need to be adjusted following Lap-Band surgery since you will not be able to swallow pills that are aspirin-size or larger, or capsules or irregular-shaped pills.
By: Johnsmith
About the Author:
The main reason for Lap band surgery is unbalanced diet and excess eating of unhygienic food. There is no proper care for the health which leads to Lap band surgery. The risk factors and contributory causes of obesity – a disease of excess body fat characterized by a body mass index of 30+ – include a range of well-documented genetic and environmental factors. But the relative effect of these causes on the development of obesity remains unclear. Before examining possible causes, note that obesity, especially severe clinical obesity like morbid or malignant obesity, carries greater risks of morbidity and premature mortality than simple overweight.
After the surgery when you are ready to leave the hospital, you may receive a visit from the hospital dietitian who will go over the required diet for Lap-Band patients. It’s important to fully understand the Lap-Band diet before you decide on this type of weight loss surgery. The first 3 to 4 days following Adjustable Gastric Lap-Band surgery patients must follow a clear liquid diet. Failure to follow the prescribed diet can cause complications such as band erosion or slippage that require additional surgery.
If you are a regular coffee, tea, or soda drinker you should be aware that no caffeine is permitted for the first three months after surgery. Carbonated beverages; both diet and regular may cause gas, bloating, and an increase in stomach size due to the carbonation and are not recommended at any time for Lap-Band patients.
Lap-Band diet consists of 5 to 6 weeks of a modified full liquid diet; such as soup, baby food, or sugar-free gelatin three times a day.
The basic foods on the Lap-Band diet include meats or other forms of protein, vegetables, and salads. The Lap-Band diet does not include most bread, potatoes and other starchy vegetables. The length of these phases may be altered according a patient’s personal weight and weight loss goals
Protein is especially important following Lap-Band surgery. After Lap-Band surgery the stomach will never hold more than 4 to 6 ounces per meal, so making every bite count is essential for healthy and nutritionally rounded weight loss success.
Lap-Band patients are advised to consume fifty to sixty grams of protein daily to avoid protein deficiency. A lack of adequate protein may also lead to depression, anxiety, irritability, apathy, and other mental health conditions, as well as cause a number of physical health issues from gallstones to colds, headaches, low blood pressure, anemia, irregular hear rates, and, in extreme cases, death. A lab can measure the amount of protein in your blood by performing a serum albumin blood test.
Certain foods may never be well tolerated by Lap-Band patients. These foods include:
Meats that is especially tough such as steak and pork chops. Oranges and grapefruits may not be tolerated, high fiber vegetables such as celery and sweet potatoes, spicy foods, fried foods.
If you are unable to tolerate milk, it’s important to add other calcium and protein rich foods such as cottage cheese. Dry milk can be added to foods for added protein.
Any medicine you take may need to be adjusted following Lap-Band surgery since you will not be able to swallow pills that are aspirin-size or larger, or capsules or irregular-shaped pills.
By: Johnsmith
About the Author:
Planet Hospital started in 2002, and our membership with the Better Business Bureau bears this out. We have been a Better Business Bureau Member since 2002, with 0 complaints since 2002, and an AA rating since 2002. But there are even better reasons to consider us.
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Tagged with: Causes Of Obesity • Diet Failure • First Three Months • lap band • Lapband • Relative Effect • Vegetables And Salads • Weight Loss Goals

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