Overweight has become epidemic, especially in the United States, where two of every three adults is overweight and one of every three adults is obese, or extremely overweight. Given the rates of overweight, it's expected that there would be a number of weight loss solutions. In fact, there are various weight loss solutions, more perhaps than one might be able to document. One weight loss solution that's attracted a good deal of attention is a surgical procedure known as gastric bypass.
Gastric bypass occurs through making the stomach smaller and by allowing food to bypass part of the small intestine. The end result of gastric bypass is a sensation of feeling physically full sooner after eating than is typical, with fewer calories consumed. The reduced role of the small intestine in the digestive process also causes fewer calories to be absorbed.
The gastric bypass method involves dividing the stomach, literally, into two sections, with one stomach section bigger than the other. Food comes into contact with this reduced section of stomach first: the small size of this section of stomach causes it to produce feelings of food fullness after not much food intake. Though all procedures that alter the stomach for purposes of weight loss are referred to as gastric bypass, there are variations in the procedure. The most commonly performed gastric bypass is Gastric bypass, Roux en-Y (proximal). As the name suggests, Gastric bypass, Roux en-Y (proximal) is a complicated procedure, but what it basically serves to do is alter the small intestine and produce a feeling of fullness in the patient soon after eating.
Gastric bypass, in a genuine sense, is an emergency method. Gastric bypass surgery is performed only on people who are obese. Gastric bypass as well is typically performed only on people who've been obese for five years or more. These sorts of individuals could reasonably be considered high health risks due to obesity, and for them gastric bypass could very well be a life extending procedure. Gastric bypass is never performed as a cosmetic procedure for improving body image, as is the case with liposuction for instance. Gastric bypass is also often considered a last resort type of procedure and will often not be performed until other attempts at weight loss have been documented to have failed. The typical time frame for sufficient recovery to occur following the gastric bypass procedure is roughly five weeks.
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