Clematis
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2015
- Messages
- 1,705
At 7+ months out, I still cannot eat even an ounce of thoroughly masticated dense protein without stomach discomfort and usually puking. I thought the puking was getting better but then realized I have subconsciously trained myself to just not eat protein. I have a protein drink for breakfast, a piece of toast with peanut butter or a protein bar for an early lunch, a single serve bag of popcorn early afternoon, and when I come home from late afternoon exercise class, I have a protein drink and later maybe greek yogurt. I don’t really eat dinner anymore. (I used to eat a lot of almonds but have noticed a link to that and a rash on my face so I may have developed a sensitivity or an allergy.) I’m not even sure it’s “dense” protein as just dipping a strip of buttered toast in the runny yolk of a soft boiled egg can cause my stomach to seize. Sometimes I can eat cheese, but more often, not. There was a time when I could eat Wendy’s chili (as in 1/3c) or chicken nuggets (as in 3 or 4) but now I can’t eat more than a spoonful of chili or one single nugget, and I have discomfort. I made a pot roast this weekend and cooked it until it was just this side of mush — two bites sat brick-like in my stomach for an hour before I barfed it up. (I don;t think this is a volume issue as I can get a single serve bag of popcorn without feeling full.) A week ago I was able to eat 1/4 of a bratwurst (uncomfortable but it stayed down) but I haven’t been able to do that again. I don't consider it an accomplishment that I can sometimes keep protein down but spend 90 minutes curled in a chair fighting nausea. When I lowered from prescription dose to OTC dose of PPI it seemed to help a little bit — I thought but now I’m not so sure. If all I can eat are carbs without discomfort and puking, I feel I could end up on a slippery slope.
I’d like to know WHY dense protein is so difficult. What are the medical reasons for this so I can lucidly explain it to my PCP? For a year now I have read the posts of DS patients on this board of their “trouble” with dense protein (without definition of what they mean by “trouble” — are they vomiting? in discomfort?). And so far I’ve seen no one explain, medically, WHY this occurs.
I see my PCP on Thursday. I only saw her once in January where I mentioned the dense protein issue, but it was still early post-op so we both were not concerned. She has never had a WLS patient of any kind, nor has she heard of DS. So far she has been very gracious about ordering labs and I don;t want to rock the boat.
I’m sure she would order a stomach scan to see if my sleeve is a figure 8 shape or twisted… but is that what could cause this? Instead, is this an issue with my pylorus? WHAT should she be looking for? What type of scan should she order? If the contrast medium is like yogurt, it’s just going to swirl on down and out. Is there such a thing as chunky contrast that would simulate dense protein to see how the pylorus is working?
Any advice you can give me for how to advise her on how to manage this would be appreciated.
I’d like to know WHY dense protein is so difficult. What are the medical reasons for this so I can lucidly explain it to my PCP? For a year now I have read the posts of DS patients on this board of their “trouble” with dense protein (without definition of what they mean by “trouble” — are they vomiting? in discomfort?). And so far I’ve seen no one explain, medically, WHY this occurs.
I see my PCP on Thursday. I only saw her once in January where I mentioned the dense protein issue, but it was still early post-op so we both were not concerned. She has never had a WLS patient of any kind, nor has she heard of DS. So far she has been very gracious about ordering labs and I don;t want to rock the boat.
I’m sure she would order a stomach scan to see if my sleeve is a figure 8 shape or twisted… but is that what could cause this? Instead, is this an issue with my pylorus? WHAT should she be looking for? What type of scan should she order? If the contrast medium is like yogurt, it’s just going to swirl on down and out. Is there such a thing as chunky contrast that would simulate dense protein to see how the pylorus is working?
Any advice you can give me for how to advise her on how to manage this would be appreciated.