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SMS – Baria-E-051 My surgery Omega loop gastric bypass

OMEGA LOOP GASTRIC BYPASS (Mini-gastric bypass)

The procedure

The omega loop gastric bypass, or mini-gastric bypass, is an alternative to the Roux-en-Y procedure and consists of two steps: reduction of the stomach and looping of the small intestine to connect to the smaller stomach.

 

  1. The stomach is divided along its entire length, creating a long narrow tube.
  2. A loop of the small intestine is then brought up and attached to the newly created stomach tube. This process bypasses the upper part of the intestine while still enabling drainage of digestive juices from the detached part of the stomach.

 

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SMS – Baria-E-050 Gastric banding

GASTRIC BANDING (LAPAROSCOPIC ADJUSTABLE BAND OR LAP-BAND)

Gastric banding is a restrictive surgical procedure that uses a band to reduce the size of your stomach without cutting or stapling. The aim is to slow and limit the amount of food that can be consumed at one time, helping you feel full faster and stay satisfied for longer periods of time, thus promoting gradual weight loss.

 

The procedure

An inflatable band is placed around the upper part of the stomach to make the stomach pouch smaller. It is adjustable (adjustments can be uncomfortable) and can be adapted to suit the individual patient. You will have a port attached to the band that is placed flat against the muscle wall, below the fat and skin of your abdomen. The band is adjusted or tightened by either adding or removing fluid through the port. It will need to be adjusted periodically to control hunger and enable weight loss to progress in the months following your surgery. Your first adjustment will be around 4–6 weeks following surgery, giving your body time to heal. It is common to experience swelling around the band.

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SMS – Baria-E-049 My surgery details: gastric bypass (Roux-en-Y)

The Roux-en-Y gastric bypass is one of the most common weight loss surgical procedures. It results in weight loss by significantly reducing the size of your stomach, so you cannot eat as much, and by bypassing your small intestines, so you absorb less fat from the foods you eat.

 

The procedure

This procedure comprises two steps: partitioning of the stomach and reconstruction of the gastrointestinal tract.

    • A small pouch is created from the upper stomach using staples. This process leaves the larger part of the stomach non-functional.
    • The small intestine is divided into two parts. One end is then attached to the stomach pouch. The other end, which is still connected to the part of the stomach that is no longer functional, is reattached to the intestinal tract to enable drainage of the digestive juices.

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SMS – Baria-E-043 Managing pain

In the days immediately following bariatric surgery, you may feel pain where the incision was made or from the position your body was in during surgery. Some patients may also experience neck and shoulder pain after having a laparoscopy.  

Your comfort is very important to your health care team.

Although there will always be some discomfort after an operation, keeping your pain under control is necessary for your recovery. When you are comfortable, you are better able to take part in activities such as walking, deep breathing, and coughing, all of which are imperative for a quick recovery.

Here are some tips to help you feel more comfortable

  • Tell your nurses and physicians if you have pain, particularly if it keeps you from moving, taking deep breaths and generally feeling comfortable.
  • Everyone is different, so keep your nurses informed about how you feel. That will help them help you.
  • Plan ahead for pain – if you are comfortable lying down, you may still need some pain medication to get up and walk around.
  • Keep ahead of the pain. Don’t wait for the pain to be at its worst. Pain medication works best when used to prevent pain.
  • The risk of becoming addicted to pain medication is very low when it is used for a specific medical purpose, such as for post-surgery pain management.

 

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SMS – Baria-E-041 Post-bariatric reconstructive surgery

If you have experienced significant weight loss after bariatric surgery, you may be left with excess skin in certain areas of your body. Some bariatric surgery patients opt for reconstructive surgery to remove this loose skin.

Plastic surgeons use contouring techniques such as tummy tuck and body lift to remove post-bariatric excess skin. These procedures have proven successful in refining the patient’s body and helping them enjoy everyday activities to the fullest.

To qualify for post-bariatric reconstructive surgery, patients must meet certain health requirements. Ask your GP or surgeon if you are a good candidate. If you are not, try to find out what you can do to improve your health status in order to qualify.

 

Criteria for reconstructive surgery:

  • Good general health status
  • At least 1.5-2 years after bariatric surgery

Weight loss has been concluded for at least 6 months

  • BMI of 25 or lower – to ensure better short-, mid- and long-term results
  • No vitamin/mineral deficiency
  • No smoking – promotes better healing of scar tissue
  • No active pregnancy, no pregnancy planned for the next 2-3 years
  • Stable diet and regular exercise
  • Realistic expectations

Many people want to know if their health insurance or public health system will cover the cost of post-bariatric reconstructive surgery. Some procedures are covered, while others are not.

With the exception of certain types of breast reduction surgery, post-bariatric reconstructive surgery is usually performed by private clinics. The patient should check the health insurance provider to find out their level of cover. The best approach is to cross-check cover with item numbers. Some private clinics only offer limited no-excess reconstructive surgery. We provide limited abdominal reconstruction procedures.

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SMS – Baria-E-063 FAQ upon returning home

Back home: what now?

Bariatric surgery is a major physical undertaking. When you return home after surgery, you will need to take special care of yourself and follow some strict guidelines. Here are answers to some frequently asked questions you will undoubtedly have about your return home after surgery.

FAQs on life at home after bariatric surgery

 

  • Will I lose my hair?

During the phase of rapid weight loss, calorie intake is much less than the body needs, and protein intake is marginal. You may also experience some vitamin and mineral deficiencies, such as iron, zinc or vitamin B. Your body reacts to this deprivation in various ways, and hair thinning or hair loss is a common side effect. This is a transient effect and resolves itself when nutrition and weight stabilise. Hair loss usually occurs anywhere from 3 to 9 months after surgery. Don’t worry. You can help minimise the loss of hair by taking your prescribed nutritional supplements daily and making sure to consume at least 60 grams of protein every day.

 

  • Why do I have to quit smoking or using tobacco after surgery?

Smoking – including cigarettes, e-cigarettes and chewing tobacco –causes decreased blood supply to your body’s tissues, which will delay healing. Additionally, smoking increases the risk of ulceration in the gastric pouch, harms every organ in the body and is linked to blood clots, marginal ulcers after gastric bypass, stroke and many other conditions. That is why it is best to refrain from smoking after surgery. Perhaps, this can be an opportunity for you to kick the habit for good.

 

  • Can I drink alcohol after surgery? 

Ideally you should stop Alcohol altogether. Alcohol contains calories but minimal nutrition and will work against your weight loss goal. It may also cause ‘dumping syndrome’. Furthermore, alcohol causes gastric irritation and can cause liver damage.

The absorption of alcohol changes after bariatric surgery because an enzyme in the stomach that usually starts the alcohol digestion process is absent or greatly reduced. Alcohol may also be absorbed more quickly into the body after bariatric surgery. Therefore, the level of alcohol in your blood may be very high, even though you consume small amounts. If you’re a driver, this could expose you to traffic violations or car accidents.

For all of these reasons, it is recommended to avoid alcohol after bariatric surgery.

 

  • Can I become pregnant after surgery?

You may start planning a pregnancy after your weight loss stabilises, but it is imperative not to become pregnant during the first 12–24 months after your surgery (follow the recommendations of your health care team). This is to protect the health and safety of both you and your baby. Once your pregnancy is planned, go for a health check to have your vitamin and mineral levels assessed and to learn how to optimise your nutrient intake.

 

  • Do I need to follow a strict nutritional programme?

Initially it is extremely important to follow to the letter the nutrition programme that your health care team prescribes at discharge to avoid leakage and other complications. A lifelong healthy diet and nutrition is the cornerstone of weight maintenance. Consolidating these changes will help to streamline your life without the need to follow strict difficult-to-follow programmes.

 

  • Do I need to adjust my sleeping habits after bariatric surgery?

A healthy sleep pattern (or ‘sleep hygiene’) is one of the keys to successful weight management. Standard sleep guidelines recommend that you get 7 to 9 hours of sleep every night.

A regular bedtime routine is not just for kids. Adults also benefit from regular bedtimes and from getting enough sleep. Inadequate sleep has been identified as a contributing factor to weight gain and diabetes.

Tips for getting a better night’s sleep:

  • Go to bed and wake up at the same times every day, also at weekends. This helps regulate your body clock and may help you fall asleep faster and sleep through the night.
  • Practise a relaxing bedtime ritual right before bedtime, away from bright lights. This helps separate your sleep time from activities that can cause excitement, stress or anxiety, which can make it more difficult to fall asleep, get a sound and deep sleep, or sleep through the night.
  • If you have trouble sleeping, avoid naps, especially in the afternoon.
  • Exercise daily: exercise at any time of day, but not at the expense of your sleep.
  • Evaluate your room. Design your sleep environment to establish the ideal conditions for sleep. Your bedroom should be cool and free from any light. Check your room for noises or other distractions. Consider using blackout curtains, eye shades, ear plugs, ‘white noise’ machines, humidifiers, fans and etc. Anything you need to make your sleep as comfortable as possible.
  • Sleep on a comfortable mattress and pillows.
  • Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, and heavy meals late in the evening because they can disrupt sleep.
  • Wind down: your body needs time to shift into sleep mode, so spend the last hour before bed doing a calming activity like reading. For some people, using an electronic device such as a laptop can make it harder to fall asleep, because the light emanating from the screen activates the brain. If you have trouble sleeping, avoid electronics before bed or in the middle of the night.
  • If you’re still having trouble sleeping, don’t hesitate to speak with your health care team.

 

  • What are some typical risks after bariatric surgery?

Typical risks associated with anaesthesia and bariatric surgery include:

  • Vomiting from eating too much too quickly and not chewing well
  • Constipation
  • Nutritional deficiencies such as anaemia and osteoporosis
  • Excess skin

 

As with any surgery, wound infections can occur up to 3 weeks after surgery. These can be treated with antibiotics. However, sometimes additional surgery may be required.

 

What are some common post-surgical complications?

  • Hernia
  • Ulcerations of the surgical wound
  • Dehydration
  • Thrush/yeast infections
  • Constipation
  • Fatigue
  • Anaemia
  • Nausea

 

What are the rare post-surgical complications?

  • Hypoglycaemia
  • Diarrhoea
  • Vomiting
  • Breathlessness

Speak to your health care team if you experience any of the above symptoms.

 

  • Could my teeth be damaged as a result of my surgery?

Yes, dental erosion, dental caries and dental hypersensitivity can occur after bariatric surgery.

To prevent these issues, it’s very important to brush your teeth after every meal.

 

  • What can I use for pain management?

Although there will always be some discomfort after an operation, keeping your pain under control is necessary for your recovery. When you are comfortable, you are better able to take part in activities such as walking, deep breathing and coughing, all of which are vital for a quick recovery.

Plan ahead for pain. If you are comfortable lying down, you may still need a pain medication to get up and walk around. Don’t wait for the pain to be at its worst. Pain medication works best when used to prevent pain. Take it according to the directions of your health care team.

 

  • Can I take my regular medication?

If you were taking medication before surgery (for example for diabetes or hypertension), your healthcare team will tell you if you need to adjust your prescription or dosage after surgery.

 

  • Can I stop using my CPAP machine?

While sleep apnoea can improve with weight loss, it is important to continue your  therapy. You should discuss the appropriateness of adjusting your sleep apnoea (check “my condition/definition”) therapy with your doctor before making any modifications.

According to some studies, about 50–75% of bariatric surgery patients experience some improvement in their sleep apnoea.

 

  • How do I best treat my scars?

The size of the scars depends on the type of procedure (open versus laparoscopic), the sutures used and how your body heals. There are things you can do to help make scars less visible, should this be a concern. Once your incisions are fully healed, you may start using silicone pads and scar minimising creams to make the scars look softer, smoother, flatter and closer to your natural skin colour. It is also important to protect fresh scars from sunlight to give them time to heal properly

 

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SMS – Baria-E-066 Micro-nutrient adherence

Introduction to nutrient intake

Bariatric surgery can dramatically alter your body’s ability to absorb vitamins, minerals and other nutrients. Additionally, the small portions of food you’ll be eating provide far less of these compounds than before surgery. Vitamin and mineral deficiencies can have serious medical implications.

That’s why it’s essential to take your prescribed nutritional supplements daily for the rest of your life. Your health care team will prescribe supplements suitable to your needs.

As your follow-up progresses, your health care team will conduct regular blood tests to check for nutritional deficiencies. The following are some of the most common deficiencies. If you neglect to take your supplements, you will be at a higher risk of developing some of the resulting symptoms.

 

  • Iron

This is one of the most common deficiencies. Iron is found in red meat and in small amounts in other foods, such as eggs, beans, nuts, apricots, beetroot and spinach. Women regularly lose iron during menstruation. Your health care team will probably prescribe 80-120 mg of iron per day.

Symptoms of iron deficiency include:

  • Fatigue
  • Irritability
  • Anaemia – blood tests can detect early warning signs by measuring the body’s iron store levels (ferritin concentration)

Severe iron deficiency and anaemia causes, defects to develop in the structure and function of the tongue, nails, mouth and stomach. The skin may appear pale, and the inside of the lower eyelids may appear pink instead of red. Fingernails become thin and flat, and eventually spoon-shaped. The tongue may burn and/or appear red, smooth and waxy. Extreme cases of untreated anaemia can result in heart failure.

 

  • Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)

Vitamin B1 is a very important nutrient after bariatric surgery. Its role is to promote the oxidative metabolism of glucose –that is the body’s ability to use carbohydrates as energy.

A deficiency of vitamin B1 can appear in connection with severe vomiting or when glucose is perfused, leading to a shortage of glucose in the nervous system. Under these circumstances, the neurological symptoms may be severe. If vomiting persists for more than 12 hours, call your health care team.

 

  • Vitamin D

Vitamin D deficiency is very common before surgery and often increases after any type of bariatric surgery. Vitamin D is important for bone health and is increasingly recognised as responsible for muscle malfunction. Lack of vitamin D may lead to decreased bone density (osteopenia and osteoporosis) and sometimes fractures. Other consequences of vitamin D deficiency include muscle weakness and fatigue, leading to falls among the elderly.

 

  • Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin)

A severe vitamin B12 deficiency can cause neurological disorders ranging from cognitive impairment and depression to incontinence and nerve damage. The damage caused by vitamin B12 deficiency cannot always be reversed by taking additional B12 supplements. It is important to regularly monitor B12 in the blood and to prevent deficiencies.

Symptoms of vitamin B12 deficiency include numbness, tingling and burning in the feet as well as stiffness and general weakness in the legs. Anaemia is common, and early signs can be detected with blood tests. It may take 5 or 6 years for deficiency symptoms to appear after natural sources of the vitamin are restricted.

 

  • Calcium

Calcium is essential for the proper functioning of many organs. The most significant consequence of calcium deficiency is its impact on bone health (osteoporosis, reduction of bone density and sometimes bone fractures). About 1000-1500 mg of calcium are required every day.

Tetany – This condition is caused by extremely low levels of calcium in the blood, increasing the irritability of nerve fibres and nerve centres and resulting in muscle spasms such as leg cramps.

 

  • Vitamin B9 (Folic acid)

Folic acid is important for red blood cell formation and healthy cell growth and function. During early pregnancy, folic acid is critical for reducing the risk of birth defects in the brain and spine. The recommended daily amount for adults is 400 mcg. Adult women who are planning a pregnancy or are pregnant should take 400 to 800 mcg of folic acid a day.

The symptoms of folic acid deficiency are often subtle. They include:

  • Fatigue
  • Grey hair
  • Mouth sores
  • Tongue swelling
  • Growth problems

 

  • Magnesium

Magnesium is a mineral that helps:

  • Maintain normal nerve and muscle function
  • Support a healthy immune system
  • Keep the heartbeat steady
  • Bones remain strong
  • Regulate blood glucose levels and aid in protein synthesis

Magnesium deficiency causes noticeable negative symptoms including muscle aches or spasms, poor digestion, anxiety, and trouble sleeping.

You will need to have your vitamin and mineral levels checked periodically. If in doubt about your nutrient requirements, deficiency symptoms or blood tests, don’t hesitate to contact your health care team.

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SMS – Baria-E-065 Medication adherence

Anti-reflux drugs

After surgery, your health care team will prescribe anti-reflux drugs for at least three months. This medication prevents sub-optimal healing, gastric reflux, and, if you had a gastric bypass, it prevents anastomotic ulcers. After three months, your health care team will evaluate, on the basis of your symptoms and the procedure you underwent, whether you need to continue to take these drugs.

Gallstone prevention

If you still have your gallbladder, your health care team may prescribe ursodeoxycholic acid for six months to prevent gallstone formation. Unfortunately, this medication is not subsidized, and the cost could be prohibitive. Starting the prescribed diet well before surgery to avoid rapid weight loss immediately after surgery, keeping well hydrated, and making sure to stimulate the gall bladder with small amounts of cream and butter every now and then in your food could help to prevent stagnation and eventual stone formation.

If you have diabetes

On the days following your procedure, you will not be eating much, and your diabetes treatment will therefore be adapted to your blood glucose. Typically, insulin doses are reduced by at least half and oral drugs are only taken if necessary. Our bariatric physician will plan your pre- and post-operative diabetic management, but we also advised regular check-ups with your endocrinologist after surgery to determine if and how your diabetes treatment should be adapted over the long term.

It is important to stop taking newer oral anti-diabetic medication (flozin’s), SGLT2, about 3 days prior to surgery. To prevent a dangerous reaction, your surgery may be postpended if the medication stoppage is overlooked.

If you take diuretics

If you took diuretics before surgery, you would need to refrain after surgery because you will be drinking much less, and there is a high risk of dehydration. Your health care team will tell you what to do about diuretics.

All your routine medications will be reviewed before surgery by our bariatric physician and a management plan will be drawn up. Your heart and blood thinning medication are very important and need to be carefully reviewed prior to surgery.

If you use a CPAP

Remember to bring your CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) device with you to the clinic when you check in for surgery. You will need it on the night before surgery and for several weeks afterwards. Later, after you have lost significant weight, your health care team will evaluate whether you need to continue to use it.

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SMS – Baria-E-064 Primary post-surgery concerns

 

Even though we do not expect you to have any serious problems after your surgery, you may experience some symptoms that need to be addressed immediately. If you experience any of the following symptoms, contact your health care team right away:

  • Accelerated heart rate above 120 bpm
  • Fever of 38° or higher
  • Redness, swelling, increased pain and/or pus-like drainage from your wound
  • Chest pain and/or shortness of breath
  • Nausea and/or vomiting that lasts for more than 12 hours
  • Pain, redness and/or swelling in your legs
  • Urine output less than four times in 24 hours
  • Pain that is unrelieved by pain medication

Normal symptoms and when to be alert

  • Moderate swelling and bruising are normal after any surgery
  • Mild to moderate discomfort or pain
  • Numbness – small sensory nerves to the skin are occasionally cut when the incision is made or are interrupted by undermining of the skin during surgery. The sensation usually returns within 2 to 3 months as the nerve endings heal

– Note: Be especially careful not to burn yourself when applying heating pads to the area that may have some postoperative numbness

  • Itching – itching and occasional small shooting electrical sensations within the skin frequently occur as the nerve endings heal. These symptoms are common during the recovery period

– Note: Ice, skin moisturisers, vitamin E oil and massage can help

  • Redness of scars – all new scars are red, dark pink or purple. The scars take about one year to fade

– Note: We recommend that you protect your scars from the sun for a year after your surgery. Even through a bathing suit, a good deal of sunlight can reach the skin and cause damage. Wear a sunscreen with a skin-protection factor (SPF) of at least 15 when out in sunny weather.