6 month follow up

Hi all.. I had my follow up visit last week at Alvarado Hospital.
People were telling me I don’t need to loose more weight. They set
my goal at 124 lbs. I’m 5′2 with a tiny frame. So, according to
the doctor, I only have 5 more pounds to loose to be at goal. I’m
striving for 115 lbs. My skin is not much problem, a few dimples on
my arms and a little looseness in the neck, so I faired pretty well
in that department. I would love a tummy tuck though just to have a
tight stomach… something i’ve never had before. I now shop in
juniors departments, wear hip hugger pants. I went to the San Diego
Mardi Gras dressed in a shirt up to my ribs and hip hugger jeans, it
was great! I guess I should grow up to adult clothes but I don’t
want to. Today…I wore an old pair of 14 jeans and walked right
out of them before I got down the hall way. Something I need to do
this week is get another drivers license. People are beginning to
reject it. It said I weighed 155 lbs and I lied about it then.

About hair loss… I had about Nov & Dec of hair loss. I began
using Vioxin and it did work. My hair is growing back already. It
looks much healtheir too.
Life is good! Good luck to everyone!
BJ
LAP RNY,Dr. Clark, Alvarado Hospital
8/13/02
217/129

2 Responses to “6 month follow up”

  1. Nanette Zora Says:

    From: awchihuahua <awchihuahua@…
    Question: When you went for your follow-up, what was the read-out on the
    Tanita scale? Each month at Alvarado, we are put on the Tanita scale that
    tells us our individual fat/mucle/water weight in our bodies. I am also
    5′2″ with a tiny frame (who knew!), yet, with ZERO fat on my body, I weigh
    131 pounds. The charts all say I am supposed to weigh 126 pounds. Will I
    ever see 126 pounds? Not likely unless I want to lose all muscle mass and
    find my anorexic self. The low end of the fat my body should carry is 23%
    which would put me, on the thin end, at about 160 pounds.
    WARNING: Many of us who started out with eating issues, continue having
    eating issues. Having been fat for years and years with no control, finding
    control via WLS is certainly empowering… to a point. When it borders on
    obsessive control over the scale, red flags dot the horizon.
    How we ever came to think that numbers on a piece of plastic (scale) were
    more important than numbers on lab results is beyond me. Why we would allow

    that same scale to control our goals instead of, like Carrie Elm, allowing
    snow boarding success to be the *true* gauge of WLS success, is beyond me.
    Who says, BJ, that you will be finally happy with the scale reading 115
    pounds? What if then your new goal is 105 pounds? Then 95? Where does
    this goal setting end? (I not only have seen several posties play this
    Move-The-Weight-Goal Game, but my own anorexic sister has done this for over
    3 decades.)
    Enough preaching on that end.
    The next thing you mention is your hair loss. Hair loss happens if it is
    going to happen no matter what you do. You say your hair began falling out
    in November and December… 3 months after your WLS. You say it is growing
    back because of Vioxin, but, you are now 6 months post-op. Hair loss begins
    3-6 months post-op and ends 3-6 months after that… whether you take
    Biotin, wash your hair in every Nioxin hair product ever made, take Zinc
    until your taste buds fall asleep, take in 100 grams of protein a day, or
    pack zebra dung on your scalp… if you are destined to lose hair, you will
    lose it… if not, you won’t. You will hear of folk remedies galore… a
    waste of money, all of them. Use your extra money to buy new clothes!
    (oooo, I can surely hear the backlash coming!)
    Barbara Herrera
    San Diego, CA (temporarily residing in El Paso, TX)
    40 years old
    Open RNY April 5, 2001
    Dr. Julie Ellner, Alvarado Hospital, San Diego, CA
    4/5/01: 344# BMI 63
    2/10/02: 179# BMI 32.7
    No more Diabetes, GERD, IBS, PCOS, stress incontinence, sleep apnea,
    snoring, joint pain, or immobility
    Continuing to discover a life I never knew existed!

  2. Jerry Cote Says:

    Hi Barbara: I haven’t been overweight all my life,
    only since 1996. At that time I weighed 120 lbs.
    Several life altering things happened to lead me to
    find comfort in food. At my surgery date I weighed
    217 lbs. I’m striving for 115 to give myself a little
    leeway. I didn’t see Leslie this time and the new
    nurse forgot to give me the print out from the tanita
    scale but she agreed 115 might be a good compromise to
    reach for, although she said I look great at my
    present weight. Leslie has always said to keep a
    close eye on the scale once you reach goal weight. Let
    the scale go up and down by 4 pounds. Gaining muscle
    weight would naturally put on more pounds, so would
    you say she is obsessive about the scale rather than
    gaining muscle mass? Food in no way rules my life nor

    does the scale. I go by how my clothes fit, how well
    I can walk and breath and just plain feel healthy.
    Don’t worry yourself that I may become aneroxic. I
    prefer to look and feel healthy. I don’t obsess about
    working out but I do swim everyday and walk/run my dog
    every day.
    About the Nioxin… what can I say, it was coming out
    by the handfulls in the end of November, I used it and
    within days hair loss completely stopped and began to
    grow back the beginning of December. It’s rather thick
    right now. That was enough to convince me. By January
    no one could tell I lost any hair. I was skeptical
    too, but it’s working for me so I’ll continue to spend
    the money on it, and still have money to shop for
    clothes. So just as you tell me to save my money, I
    say save your opinions.
    BJ

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