Garth Davis M.D. First he quite good looking and young, learned he is age 37. He sounded knowledgeable about obesity and gastric bypass and also sounded genuinely concerned and compassionate about the plight of the obest. He truly believes the emotional health of the surgical candidate is extremely important and specifically understands emotional eating and food as a best friend. He seems to have a busy practice, lots of activity both times I went to his office. His staff strikes me as disorganized and the faces have changed from my visit in May versus my visit per op in November. The office manager trys to keep everything moving I can tell and she is very knowledgeable about insurance issuesl
My impression of Dr. Garth has only gotten better now that I am post op. He obviously is good at what he does, even used a pain free material for the drain and I did not feel a thing when he pulled it. He emphasizes aftercare from the beginning information seminar. He even attends the support groups at Methodist on the last Wednesday of each month. I will learn more about aftercare when I seem him this coming Thursday but sometime soon I meet with he, the nutritionist, the psych, for an hour. These folks always go to support meetings. Their statistics show those who participate in support groups and take their vitamins and follow pouch rules lose and maintain the best.
He discussed the risks at our first meeting and at his seminar and they are covered in detail in the preop consent form. His and his father's stats show low complication rates, and no deaths.
I think he is excellent overall, both in surgical competence and bedside manner. I tend to be critical of surgeons in particular from my nursing background but he is truly unique.
Congratulations
Karen! It sounds
like you're doing
great! I had my
surgery on Monday
and came home
yesterday. The docs
say I'm doing great
but I have a lot of
burning and stinging
in the left
incision. I also
got diarrhea after
the leak test and it
hasn't stopped yet.
Keep in
touch,,,we'll
compare notes.
Judy C.
Karen,
I am so happy to
hear that you are
now post-op and
doing so well. Linda
told me at the
support group
meeting last evening
that she visited you
yesterday. Now
you're on the
loser's bench with
us and time will
fly!
Best of luck to you
during your
continued recovery.
Maybe the three of
us can attend
meetings together.
God Bless you,
Anita R
(mrsa24)
I have had a mostly smooth post op period. I needed no help at home for anything except could not drive a car for the first week. Was off pain meds in a few days. I had no problem taking my meds, whole whether caps or pills. I am now off all three blood pressure meds as my B/P stays around 105/60 and goes only as high as 118/68. I am also off Glucophage since before surgery, that was for insulin resistance and my primary MD thought I would never be off that one. Now, I only take a thyroid pill and three antidepressant/antianxiety pills and one for my gall bladder, then all the necessary vitamins.
I am eating soft foods now. Wendy's chili is great and I can now eat 1 cup of that, whereas when I eat broiled salmon I get full on 3 oz and can't eat the veggie not even a bite. I have had one episode of what I hear are called the "foamies". I ate Endamame(soy beans) with a little squash and perhaps did not chew well enough or ate to much, no sure but had the tightness then pain in my sternum, mid chest, stood up, walked around, then bent over the kitchen sink and coughed and up can nothing but mucus, gobbs of it over a 10 minute period. Yuck, this is not pleasant. Wierd though as I have eaten chicken, beef, fish with no problem.
My only real problem is a total lack of energy when I do the simplest things like go to the store or visit a friend, or get my hair cut, or even if I stay home and do nothing. I end up taking a nap every day. I need a job and am looking hard but if I had one I am not sure how I would be able to handle eight hours. My surgeons says this happens to some of his patients and it is a matter of the body healing, and in time this will pass. One OH/OFF friend says her energy did not return till between two and three months post op. Just knowing it has happened to at least one other person helps me not feel so weird.
I am losing less than 4 # per week, but my body is shrinking fast. I have lost 30# since 11/14 when I went on the pre op fasting liquid diet. I went shopping in my closet for something to wear to an interview yesterday and found more than half of my clothes are way too big. After finding a suit to wear to interview I stopped trying on things as being unemployed I cannot afford to replace clothes. I find it scary to think that I really must discard the clothes that don't fit and keep only those that do fit, as few as they might be. I also must start shopping which I hate, have always hated, and trying on clothes to see the size I am and find a place to shop as my sizes change, etc. I have tried two resale shops so far and was very disappointed overall. Will keep trying these shops though. Watching myself shrink on the other hand is fun as I keep seeing a different shape every few days.
Having the OFF forum has been such a great support for me and these ladies have helped me so much in both getting ready to have the surgery and post op. Thanks to everyone on OH and OFF. Your support in invaluable.