Gastric Bypass
After making the incisions with the open or laparoscopic technique, the surgeon cuts across the top of your stomach, sealing it off from the rest of your stomach. The resulting pouch is about the size of a walnut and can hold only about an ounce of food. Normally, your stomach can hold about 3 pints of food.
Then, the surgeon cuts the small intestine and sews part of it directly onto the pouch. Food then goes into this small pouch of stomach and then directly into the small intestine sewn to it. Food bypasses most of your stomach and the first section of your small intestine, and instead enters directly into the middle part of your small intestine.
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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Autem laudantium in adipisci ipsa optio quas id excepturi non, eos cupiditate, necessitatibus sapiente illo error. Vero adipisci quidem aut itaque labore.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Autem laudantium in adipisci ipsa optio quas id excepturi non, eos cupiditate, necessitatibus sapiente illo error. Vero adipisci quidem aut itaque labore.