Step 10: Post-surgical lifestyle changes

Bariatric surgery is a major life-changing experience. You'll have a whole new set of lifestyle rules for maintaining your weight loss and health goals. In the years leading up to the surgery, you may have struggled with the physical, medical, emotional, social, and professional consequences of obesity. Bariatric surgery may signify the beginning of your healing process in these areas.

Some people who have bariatric surgery find that it's helpful to attend therapy sessions with a counselor. Talking to a professional about your previous struggles with obesity and your current struggles with your new post-surgery lifestyle can help you understand more about yourself, and help you stay focused on your goals.

You may also find that being involved in support groups with other people who have experienced similar struggles can be extremely helpful. Support groups can help you stay motivated.

Carefully following the prescribed diet after surgery is essential both to protect your body and to ensure weight loss.

After gastric bypass surgery, for the first several days after surgery the diet will consist only of clear liquids (water, broth, high protein fruit drinks, or other clear liquids). After this initial period, the diet will transition to pureed or blended foods (yogurt, pudding, cream soup, liquid supplements). After a week or so, you will be able to gradually begin adding soft foods to your diet -- about 1 ounce of a new soft food every 2 or 3 days:

By a month after surgery, some normal foods can become a regular part of the diet, although limiting food selections may become permanent. You might need, for example, to avoid steaks and chops, apple skins, citrus fruit membranes, incompletely chewed raw or fibrous vegetables, and fresh bread (because of the tendency to form a solid "bread ball" in the stomach pouch -- toasting may prevent this problem).

Although each person is different, and there are different recommendations depending on the specific type of weight loss surgery you have, some of the basic recommendations include:

References

Batsis JA, Lopez-Jimenez F, Collazo-Clavell ML, Clark MM, Somers VK, Sarr MG. Quality of life after bariatric surgery: a population-based cohort study. Am J Med. 2009;122:1055.e1-1055.e10.

Townsend CM Jr, Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders; 2012.

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Review Date: 12/16/2012
Reviewed By: Robert A. Cowles, MD, Associate Professor of Surgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.
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