Thursday 19 January 2017

deadly secrets Your Doctor Won’t Tell You About gastric bypass Weight Loss Surgery

Deadly Secrets About Weight Loss Surgery Of Gastric Bypass

1.Weight Loss Surgery could boost your risk for alcohol use or abuse.
One study published in JAMA examined people who had gastric bypass surgery at one, three, six, and 24 months after weight loss surgery and found that patients’s risk for increased alcohol use after the procedure was significantly higher. This may be because patients have higher peak alcohol levels, and reach those levels more quickly, after surgery , although other theories do exist to explain the connection.
2- You’re going to poop more — a lot more.
About 85 percent of patients who undergo Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RNYGB) surgery will experience extreme bouts of diarrhea known as dumping syndrome at some point post-surgery, according to The American Society for Metabolic and weight loss surgery (ASMBS). It’s usually the result of poor food choices (including refined sugars, fried foods, and some fats or dairy), and can have mild-to-severe symptoms that also include sweating, flushing, lightheadedness, desire to lie down, nausea, cramping, and active audible bowels sounds. Read more