For patients of weight loss surgery gastric bypass is the result of the dumping syndrome and rapid gastric emptying, physically and dramatic lifestyle is disturbing. To avoid before surgery, patients need, sweet processed carbohydrates, fatty fried foods and processed carbohydrates all the simple, to avoid dumping syndrome. Some patients with lactose intolerance, weight loss surgery (WLS) the experience of dumping after the meal, which contain lactose: milk sugar products. While mostPatients with dietary guidelines, it is inevitable that eventually will experience dumping syndrome to follow.
Gastric dumping syndrome occurs when chewed and partially digested food leaves the stomach too quickly and reaches the small intestine. This causes the pancreas to large amounts of insulin into the bloodstream and release the symptoms of hypoglycemia. Dumping syndrome is most commonly associated with gastrointestinal malabsorption surgery, particularly gastric bypassSurgery. The symptoms of dumping syndrome occurs immediately after meals or eating within three hours. Each person is unique in the reaction gastric dumping, however, the most common symptoms are nausea, vomiting, bloating, cramps, diarrhea, profuse sweating, chills, dizziness and fatigue result. When insulin levels return to normal regression of symptoms.
Type of physical comfort: At the beginning of dumping a result, the patient may first notice a feeling of disorientationor confusion. This suggests that out of the body begins to panic about an excess of insulin in the blood flooding. A person who has suffered from dumping is likely to be a feeling of despair that they realize the occurrence of dumping syndrome. Which provides for the physical well-being at this time is the first response to an order of dumping. Attempts to terminate or suspend the result of dumping is useless. Many gastric bypass patients rather familiar with the practice of dumping by others looking for a cool place to isolateto lie down. Symptoms may include vomiting and diarrhea so that the patient must find a resting place near a bathroom. Many people experience a short period of chills, profuse sweating followed by a prolonged period of: providing a cover is used to relieve the chills. A patient is to reach for the ceiling, if necessary, if the caregiver does not seek to cover the patient, if requested. The patient may be symptoms of sensory dysfunction, including abnormal and extreme sensitivityLights, sound and touch. These symptoms are temporary and many patients find relief, if the light can be controlled and are at rest in an environment of reduced noise. Many patients say that they prefer to be comforted by touching their caregivers because of acute sensitivity to the touch during the dumping. Hydration and electrolyte drinks: gastric bypass patients, dumping syndrome may suffer, already slightly dehydrated before dumping the result in E 'major returnBody to a state of hydrated by drinking water at room temperature or electrolyte sports drinks enriched. Patients should be from sugar-sweetened beverage consumption of juice or discouraged in an attempt to correct the imbalance of insulin. The body is already in a state of reactionary and corrective action of insulin and increasing efforts to accelerate the correction process are rarely successful. Search emergency medicine: the patient should obtain emergency medical attention if symptoms last for a dumping syndromelonger period. If a patient loses consciousness immediately, and accurate information to emergency medical care for patients, including bariatric procedures, history of diabetes or hypoglycemia, and an account of food intake before dumping the result.
Home First Aid
Not all patients undergoing surgery for weight loss experience dumping syndrome. It occurs more frequently in patients with malabsorption procedures, especially gastric bypass. The patients in the adjustable gastric (LAP-BAND) and gastrointestinalSleeves are not known to have the dumping syndrome. After a series of dumping patients should consult their bariatric center to identify the cause of the event and make a plan to prevent future episodes.
Emergency First Aid for the gastric bypass dumping syndrome
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