It makes me really sad to see patients tell themselves it is about diet and exercise. I was very active and was already on a permanent diet. There is only so much that diet and exercise can do when you are dealing with such a major disruption to the metabolism.
Quote from: cariad on July 18, 2011, 12:47:54 PMIt makes me really sad to see patients tell themselves it is about diet and exercise. I was very active and was already on a permanent diet. There is only so much that diet and exercise can do when you are dealing with such a major disruption to the metabolism.I think this is a conflicting statement. If one can control her or his diet and have a good exercise, the weight gain is not a big problem. If one fails to control her/his diet, this is another issue (failing on diet control does not mean the diet does not work, and there are lots of people who fail to control diet without any steroids). Why some people can control diet and others do not is more than just a metabolism problem. All transplant patients I know with steroids, most of them do not have over weight problems. With steroids, controlling diet would be more difficult than without it, but the key is still the balance between input and output. Diet and exercise are the key to maintain the balance. For patients with steroids, there are very limited options for them besides diet and exercise.
But for most people the daily long term dose of steroids given either as part of the protocol,for a rejection episode or some other reason(as in my case) causes weight gain, emotionalism and hatred for the steroids in most people. This is not usually just about controlling diet and exercise. I exercised a tremendous amount through hard labor when I was on the steroids and gained 29 lbs and in 6 mos off the steroids I have exercised less and lost 15. I only post about my personal experiences and what I have learned works for me. I would never try to tell another kidney patient that all their steroid problems can be fixed by proper exercise and diet control because for most it wont work.
Cariad, if I still had a company I would hire you on the spot just for the way you defend your positions. Go girlEd
Moosemom,Our rants had nothing to do with your initial query. I didn't even remember it when I posted.Never stop asking questions.Ed
Wow cariad, a 1000 calorie diet, I was first on a 1800 and then a 2000 calorie diet and still was thin (well still am ). I thought my calorie intake was low as a kid.
I think the medical profession's take on BMI is changing already. When I was getting signed up for the list, all I heard was BMI, BMI, BMI. You need to be.......THIS weight. I was talking about weight loss and gain and diets with one of the docs while I was in the the hospital at the beginning of the month, and saying I was glad to finally have my guts back in place so that I would (eventually) be able to start exercising again. I said my BMI numbers said I needed to be under 145. The doc shrugged and said "BMI isn't as important as you think." Well, yeah, I agree - when my recommended weight is 145, and I started out all those years ago at 230, I didn't need a formula to calculate that I was fat. I had a mirror and a closet full of plus-size clothes for that.Besides, thanks to surgery, I'm on a no-fail diet right now. Eat anything but chicken broth or crackers and throw it right back up. I'm 17 pounds under what I was when I went in for surgery, and I don't know if I've lost all the edema yet or not.