Why You Should Try to Avoid Weight Loss Surgery

The weight loss industry is an ever-growing industry. Every year new extreme diets, miracle pills, and surgeries come out in hopes to snag your money. Your weight loss goals should never consider surgery though. Here are a few reasons why surgery is a bad idea.

Complications

A big issue from any surgery is the complications. Complications don’t hide just because this might be a cosmetic surgery either. Weight loss surgeries are tricky affairs that come with their own special set of complications.

There are numbers that show nearly twenty percent of people who go under the knife for a stomach surgery come back within six months due to complications. Let’s not forget all the horror stories of people who have had syringes left inside their bodies due to a doctor’s mishap.

Restrictive Diet

Many surgeries will put you on a restrictive diet afterwards. It does not matter if you had liposuction or gastric bypass. Once the surgery is completed in the name of your weight loss, you will be forever tied to specialized diets.

These diets are often in place to make the surgery successful. Procedures like a gastric bypass come with dietary restrictions due to a drastic change in your digestive system. Ask anyone who has had this procedure what happens when they eat food not on that post surgical weight loss diet plan.

Keep in mind that cosmetic procedures are only quick fixes. To keep that weight off, diets must be followed. If these diets are not followed, the patient will end up right back on the operating table. That is just more money out of your pocket and in the doctors.

Failure rates

The biggest issue with any weight loss surgery is how often they fail. Weight loss is a long-term ordeal. Numerous studies show patients often tack on the weight they lost after surgery. Some people add on more weight than they began with.

Let’s take the gastric bypass example. This procedure is where the stomach is reduced to as little as twenty percent of its normal size. This should mean less room to cram full of Twinkies and Oreos.

What ends up happening is patients just stretch out their newly reduced stomachs. Patients will enjoy a large amount of weight loss up front, but then they get lax and start consuming more food. This leads to stretched out stomachs and thinner stomach walls. All this while the weight slowly comes back with a vengeance.

There just might not be an option

For some people surgery is the only option they have left. When this happens there are a few things you can do to make sure you are not back on the operating table again. The most import is to follow what the doctor tells you. If you are not allowed to eat gobs of sugar, don’t do it. That super extra large ice cream cone may look tempting, but remind yourself of that operating room table and the hospital food that followed.

Weight loss is a tough life style change. Choosing any surgical procedure should be left as a last ditch effort in only the most extreme cases. Keep in mind that anything worth achieving will take time and dedication.

About Velma

Hi! My name is Valery Elmer (Velma) and I’m your host at WeightLoss.org. I've had my fair share of trying and sometimes succeeding in losing weight (and then occasionally going back to where I was before). I'm hoping that my experience and studies in biology and chemistry will propel this website to the level where it will help you get on the right track and reach your goals!

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