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CNN:  Surgery helps woman drop 140 pounds, 10 dress sizes

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Petula - 30 Nov 2007 11:07 GMT
http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/diet.fitness/11/28/weightloss.hill/index.html

Surgery helps woman drop 140 pounds, 10 dress sizes

Story Highlights

* Patty Hill weighed 280 pounds at her heaviest and wore a size 26/28

* She lost 140 pounds and dropped 10 dress sizes with the Lap-Band

* Hill says weight loss surgery is not easy, takes discipline and planning

* Weight loss has restored her health, energy and self-confidence

By Jacqueline Adams
CNN

(CNN) -- Standing near the coffin of one of her closest friends, Patty Hill
made a promise that would forever change her life.

Her friend, Gail, had died from a blood clot just a week after undergoing
gastric bypass surgery to make her stomach smaller. Hill was scheduled to
have the same surgery and believed it was the only way to end her lifelong
struggle with obesity.

Tipping the scales at 280 pounds and standing 5 feet 5 inches tall, Hill
says she was depressed, moody and always defensive. The 47-year-old mother
from Weymouth, Massachusetts, was morbidly obese, and after her friend's
death, she was beginning to lose hope.

"That was the end of the gastric bypass for me," remembers Hill. "At her
wake, I promised everyone that I would not go ahead with surgery."

Hill wore a 26/28 dress size and had heart problems. Now, not only was she
afraid that she couldn't lose the weight, but she was even more afraid
she'd die, leaving her daughters, ages 23 and 14, to grow up without her.

Just when she'd lost all hope, her cardiologist asked if she had ever
considered Lap-Banding -- a less-invasive form of weight-loss surgery.

Hill immediately started researching the procedure, in which an adjustable
band is placed around the upper part of the stomach to restrict the amount
of food the stomach will hold. According to MayoClinic.com, the band
creates a small pouch opening to the stomach. The amount of food your
stomach will hold is controlled by injecting or removing fluid from the
band. Even though gastric banding restricts the amount of food, it does not
reduce the absorption of calories or nutrients.

In the United States, where two-thirds of the population is either
overweight or obese, weight-loss surgeries have increased in recent years,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While the
surgeries are successful at helping people lose weight and reduce their
risk for hypertension, diabetes and other chronic illnesses -- patients
have to carefully weigh the benefits of the procedure with the serious
risks, side effects and even death in some cases.

Some of the more common side effects of weight-loss surgery can be
difficulty digesting starchy foods and protein, which can lead to other
physical conditions including hair loss, fatigue, swelling and muscle
weakness.

Once she did her homework on gastric banding, Hill says she knew the
procedure was for her. She sought treatment at Tufts-New England Medical
Center in Boston, Massachusetts. The program required six weeks of
pre-operation behavior-modification classes and monthly support meetings.

On February 28, 2005, Hill's Lap-Band surgery was a success.

She immediately started losing weight, dropping 20 pounds the first month,
and continued to lose 10 to 15 pounds a month. Six months later, at the end
of August, she had dropped 75 pounds.

As the second anniversary -- or "Bandiversary" -- of her surgery
approached, Hill had lost 130 pounds and reached her original target weight
of 150 pounds. CNN I-Reporters share their weight-loss photos »

That's when she began exercising and keeping track of her daily food intake
via the Web site FitDay.com.

"You don't realize how many calories you're taking in until you start
keeping track," said Hill.

Ultimately, Hill surpassed her original weight loss goal and lost another
10 pounds. She currently weighs 140 pounds and, after dropping 10 dress
sizes, now fits perfectly into a size 8, she says.

Despite the rapid weight loss, surgery wasn't an easy way out. Hill says
she still has to plan her meals and eat properly, and one of the biggest
downsides is that she has difficulty digesting some starchy foods.

"I can't eat bread, potatoes, rice," says Hill. "I have to cut up
everything into pencil eraser-size [pieces] and chew, chew, chew."

Still, the surgery has restored her life, Hill says.

One of the biggest perks of losing 140 pounds is traveling with greater
ease. She doesn't have to ask for a seat belt extender and no longer feels
like she's spilling into her neighbor's seat.

"I went to Cancun last July, and I was able to go horseback riding without
hurting the horse," jokes Hill.

She's also discovered something else.

"I'm actually petite," Hill says excitedly. "I can buy stylish clothes.
Before surgery, I just bought clothes that fit me. Now I can buy clothes
that look good on me."

When she's shopping, Hill says, people make eye contact with her more often
and wait on her right away. When she was obese, Hill says, she felt almost
invisible, and even though she didn't want to believe it, people ignored
her.

"Men actually flirt with me; it cracks me up, but freaks out my daughters,"
says Hill. "I have a boyfriend with a Harley. I love riding on the back of
[his bike]."

The weight loss has also inspired Hill to take acting classes, and she's
even appeared as an extra in several movies. Earlier this year, she
attended her first Boston Red Sox game and was elated to discover that she
could fit into the seats.

Best of all, Hill says, she has a lot more energy and self-confidence, and
she's healthier. She says the surgery is the best thing she's done for
herself.

"I am so happy with the way I look and feel," says Hill, "I never want to
go back to the way I looked before. It sounds very superficial, but it's
the truth."
The Master - 30 Nov 2007 18:16 GMT
> * Patty Hill weighed 280 pounds at her heaviest and wore a size 26/28

My ex wife was at 290 at her heaviest, and wore a size 28.

> * She lost 140 pounds and dropped 10 dress sizes with the Lap-Band

She went down to 150, also losing 140 lbs...  Not sure of how many dress
sizes the lost though.

> * Hill says weight loss surgery is not easy, takes discipline and planning

My wife would eat just as much as she did.  Would then throw up because
she over stuffed her small pouch, then return to eating.  On average, she
would hurl about 5 times each meal.

> Her friend, Gail, had died from a blood clot just a week after undergoing
> gastric bypass surgery to make her stomach smaller. Hill was scheduled to
> have the same surgery and believed it was the only way to end her lifelong
> struggle with obesity.

At the time my wife had her surgery, 1 out of every 200 people, .5%, died
as a result of complications due to the bypass procedure.

> Just when she'd lost all hope, her cardiologist asked if she had ever
> considered Lap-Banding -- a less-invasive form of weight-loss surgery.

The Lap band has virtually no deaths.  Complications come from the band
shifting off the stomach and pinching the esophagus.  A trip to the ER can
have the band removed without a problem.  The bypass, however, can have
stomach leakage, a much more serious problem.

> Hill immediately started researching the procedure, in which an adjustable
> band is placed around the upper part of the stomach to restrict the amount
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> band. Even though gastric banding restricts the amount of food, it does not
> reduce the absorption of calories or nutrients.

Technically, the nerve endings that trigger the "full feeling" are located
in the top portion of the stomach.  The "pouch" created by the band is
intended to stimulate these nerves with very little food.  It will then
drop into the rest of the stomach (more like a slow leak actually).  By
the time the pouch is empty, your brain already recieved the full signal.
In theory, you eat less, and so you lose weight.

> Some of the more common side effects of weight-loss surgery can be
> difficulty digesting starchy foods and protein, which can lead to other
> physical conditions including hair loss, fatigue, swelling and muscle
> weakness.

You also have to eat your food until it becomes a liquid soup.  Leaving
chunks, even small ones, can get caught in the "pinch" created by the
lapband.  They also cause problems for people with the bypass.  The bypass
operation also opens you up to "dumping".  Eating high fat foods will
cause sever diarrea as the body tries to flush itself out.  This leads to
dehydration, and in some cases even death.

> Once she did her homework on gastric banding, Hill says she knew the
> procedure was for her. She sought treatment at Tufts-New England Medical
> Center in Boston, Massachusetts. The program required six weeks of
> pre-operation behavior-modification classes and monthly support meetings.

However, if you are over 300 lbs, the doctors recomend the bypass rather
then the lapband.

> "I can't eat bread, potatoes, rice," says Hill. "I have to cut up
> everything into pencil eraser-size [pieces] and chew, chew, chew."

Bread, potatoes, and rice, all expand in the stomach.  Doing so can cause
a lapband to shift, or a bypass to burst open.

> When she's shopping, Hill says, people make eye contact with her more often
> and wait on her right away. When she was obese, Hill says, she felt almost
> invisible, and even though she didn't want to believe it, people ignored
> her.

That's because skinny people are @$$holes.

> "Men actually flirt with me; it cracks me up, but freaks out my daughters,"

You dodn't hang around the right men then.  There are plenty of men who
like BBWs more then skinny chicks...  Did you go out at all when you were
larger?  Probably not much.  Now, as a skinny person, you have the
confidence to go out more.  In other words, men didn't flirt with you
because you weren't around men, you kept to yourself.  If you would have
"been out there", you would have been flirted with back then also.

> The weight loss has also inspired Hill to take acting classes, and she's
> even appeared as an extra in several movies.

That's because society treats fat people like second class citizens, and
she fell for it, believing it herself...  If she wanted to act, she should
have taken the classes...  Using "skinny" as an excuse tells us a lot
about her personality.
 
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