I have primary Lymphodeama in both lower legs and one hand. It’s been stable for many years and managed with compression garments.
I have over the last decade put on quite a lot of weight. I’ve tried everything and weight loss is so slow I get get up and give up only to gain more. I’m also a stress eater and have had 18 motets of stress with a very ill husband.
I am considering weight loss surgery but been trying to find out if it could be detrimental to my Lymphodeama?
Any one know or had this surgery?
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Jenny113
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Thank you. My feeling is that Lymphodeama is a very miss understood condition and a general surgeon might not understand. I will ask my lymphodema nurse.
The dangerous fat is the visceral fat. No surgery can remove this.
As we all know, losing weight is never easy, OP, and it needs discipline and positivity. The latter is hard to maintain when carrying lymph all the time.
A pound or two in the right direction lost in a gradual way is the goal I would set. Anything drastic usually spells defeat. Strict routines are dispiriting.
I have the same problem, but by watching what I eat, rather than how much I eat and combining this with light but consistent exercising at least maintains rather than increases. Selecting an appropriate diet is not that difficult nowadays, as so much information abounds.
I have an exercise bike and a power pad (Vibrapower.) Some days I am only a minute on the former and only a couple more on the latter, but it is a step in the right direction at least. Some days I go mad. It depends.
The first aim has to be to stop continuing with weight gain. Losing weight then becomes easier.
hi, I had weight loss surgery to help my primary lymphedema in my leg. I am sad to report that I think it did make my edema worse. I never had lymphedema in my abdomen, but now I do. I regained my weight within 5 years despite continuing to eat on my weight loss regimen. My lymphedema ultimately jn the end is worse my lymph nodes were damaged or something triggered it in my abdomen- as it’s very very uncomfortable to have abdominal lymphedema - and I believe the surgery into my abdomen created that.
Hi Jenny, I don’t have Lymphedema but I did have a Gastric Bypass 10 years ago and I gained half the weight back. The problem with surgery is it doesn’t change the reasons why we over eat. I think many people gain back the weight eventually. I was lucky not to have any complications from the surgery but I know some people wind up with a variety of issues from severe infection to loose hanging skin that has to be surgically removed and is not covered by insurance. I don’t regret getting the surgery. My personal opinion on your situation is if your health care providers think it could help you and you feel that you want it, you should do it.
Hi there Haggi, I'm pleased it worked out well for you. It sounds similar to the Atkins diet. He used to say that sugar or anything that can convert to sugar was the enemy too. At the time everybody in the diet industry said that he was a krank, but it seems that he was really on the right path all along. I will check the Aussie out, thank you.
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