Babies and gastric bypass

I had a gastric bypass in august 07 and I really want a baby with my partner but I am worried about the effects it might have on a baby Please could someone help with this question as I cant find a answer anywhere.

Answer #1

I had gastric bypass in July 2005. I was only 11 months out from surgery when I got pregnant with my daughter. Doctors reccomend you being 18 to 24 months out before becomming pregnant. I had a VERY VERY difficult pregnancy! I was hospitalized 22 times while pregnant. Most for dehydration and extreme nausa. At 4 months pregnant my gall bladder failed. I had to have surgery to remove it while pregnant! I was on strict bed rest for the rest of my pregnancy. My daughter is definatly worth it. I am telling you this only as a matter of caulion. Now everyone is different but, you might want to wait a little while. If you do deciede to proceed now, go ahead and find a great high risk OB. Also, if you would like to funmail me I can give you more insite as to getting through this type of pregnancy. PS congrats on your surgery
take care mel

Answer #2

BACKGROUND: Women who suffer from morbid obesity are often infertile. If these women are able to become pregnant, they are considered high risk because of the hypertension, diabetes and other associated risk factors. Following the pregnancy is difficult due to limitations of the physical examinations. More costly ultrasound examinations are needed at a higher frequency. Bariatric surgery reduces the woman’s weight and the incidence of obesity related co-morbidities. The number of pregnancies and rate of complications during those pregnancies in our post-bariatirc surgical patients were evaluated. METHOD: Our group has been doing bariatric surgery since the early 1980s. We have over 2000 active patients on our current newsletter mailing list. The patients also have a series of networks through support groups. The patients are informed to contact us when they become pregnant so we may assist the obstetrician with their care. Through these various means, we have been able to identify 41 women in our patient population who have become pregnant. Using personal interview, questionnaire, and review of perinatal records, pregnancy-related risks and complications were studied. RESULTS: With over a 95% follow-up rate on the patients identified as having been pregnant following surgery, we found less risk of gestational diabetes, macrosomia, and cesarean section than associated with obesity. There were no patients with clinically significant anemia. CONCLUSION: Since the patients had an operation that restricts their food intake, some basic precautions should be taken when they become pregnant. With this in mind, our patients have done well with their pregnancies. The post-surgical group had fewer pregnancy-related complications than did an internally controlled group that were morbidly obese during their previous pregnancies. I hope this helped a bit. I dont know about the morbid obesity thing but am asuming it would be similar to normal obesity. Mel Letme know if you want the link.

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