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Doctor: Julio Teixeira
Specialty: Bariatric Surgery
Location: St. Luke’s–Roosevelt Hospital
Dr. Teixeira: We have basic criteria to decide when someone’s a candidate for weight-reduction surgery. They have to have a body-mass index over 40 or a BMI of 35 with related health complications. This patient’s BMI was 54. She’s a 44-year-old technical writer for a brokerage firm, and she’s struggled with obesity for decades. She believes that her weight has even had a social impact on her son. She had all the hallmarks of cardiovascular disease related to her obesity: diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol. In five or six years, she could have had a heart attack.
We performed a lap-band surgery, which places a ring in the upper part of the stomach. We made a small incision of approximately two centimeters around her belly button. Once we entered the abdomen, we placed the band on the upper part of the stomach, leaving a small pouch the size of a golf ball above the ring. This pouch is the only part of the stomach she’ll be using; because it takes time for food to trickle through the restriction created by the band, the patient will experience fullness after even a small meal.
The whole surgery took less than an hour, and she’s doing fine. She’s lost twelve pounds already. I’ll be seeing her on a monthly basis because we’d like her to lose a third of her current body weight. At one or two pounds a week, that would be a three-year process. Then she’ll be in the same ballpark as the rest of us.
As told to Katie Charles.
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The patient, who at the time of surgery weighed 290 pounds, meets with the anesthesiologist before her procedure. She will have a ring placed in her stomach which will reduce its size and restrict the amount of food she’ll be able to consume. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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Dr. Teixeira uses the images from a camera as his guide through the operation. The screen shows the liver, stomach, and surrounding fat. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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Dr. Teixeira, mid-surgery. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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The patient’s navel, transformed into the incision site. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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Four separate instruments are inserted through the patient’s navel. From bottom to top: the camera, the liver retractor, and two dissectors, which Dr. Teixeira will use to prepare the area where the band will go. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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The white silicone band, now around the stomach, is about to be locked into place. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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Post-surgery, the patient is able to breathe on her own. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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Dr. Teixeira on his way to speak to the patient’s family. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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In the recovery room, Dr. Teixeira talks to the patient. In two hours, she’ll go home. She has already lost twelve pounds and is expected to lose two pounds a week over three years to reach her desired weight. Photo: Q. Sakamaki/Redux
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