Heya Tracy - welcome to the Community and congrats on beginning your WLS journey! I had the
roux-en-y gastric bypass on April 28th this year. The only regret is that I didn't do it a couple years earlier
My surgeon required that I quit smoking. You can see a little bit of my story on the
About WLS Journey Community Forums page. But he explained it like this: weight loss surgery is all about conquering
obesity and food addiction and getting
healthy. Why go through such a surgery if you're gonna continue to smoke which is a direct contradiction to the concept of "healthy"? --- Well he didn't say all that - I did LOL - But you get the gist of it...
I quit smoking the very day of my 1st surgeon consult. It'll be 2 years in April. Still hard for me to comprehend - but I tell you for me - it was a mental addiction. Physical nicotene addiction may be a totally different thing entirely. But you can do it - you just have set your mind that you want to do it. Easier said than done I know all to well lol...
At anyrate - welcome to the forum - I tend to ramble a bit - but it's all for the love of making our surgery tool a success here at The Journey. So enjoy and happy posting
Jacquii.
ps - I'm not sure if there are any other Ohioans here - I'm born-n-bred Tennessean - so we're kinda neighbors
-- Feel free to let your surgeon know about The Journey - Perhaps s/he can let other patients know... We're a very new community in the online WLS support niche - but I do believe we're gonna do quite well as the cause is a noble one.

|
Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass
|
 |
A type of gastric bypass procedure which combines restrictive and malabsorption techniques - meaning, it reduces the amount of food a patient can comfortably eat (restriction), and also reduces the amount of calories that can be digested in the small intestine (malabsorption). This combination of bariatric methods leads to greater weight loss and the roux-en-y procedure is seen as one of the best ways to treat clinically severe obesity.
See WLS Videos for animated surgery technique. |
|
|
Obesity
|
 |
Obesity results from the excessive accumulation of fat that exceeds the body's skeletal and physical standards. Obesity has been defined as a weight more than 20% above what is considered normal according to standard age, height, and weight tables, or by a complex formula known as the body mass index. According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), an increase in 20 percent or more above your ideal body weight is the point at which excess weight becomes a health risk.
CLICK HERE TO OPEN THE JOURNEY BMI CALCULATOR! |
|