MikeTG
New member
After exhaustive search, most sites I visited say that hanging skin is unavoidable, especially if a "lot" of weight is lost and/or too fast (more than 2 lbs a month).
The only solutions offered/available seem to be acceptance or surgery.
However, no site offered a clear definition of how much "a lot" of weight is. Adjectives used are: Significant, massive, a lot, etc... but no hard figures are ever provided, nor are the demographics about the people themselves.
Some medical sites provided pictures (of pre and post-operatory pacients) of people who have lost 200+ lbs and seemed to be physically inactive, as well as "older" (another adjective without definition. My guess, from the pictures diplayed, were that they ranged from 45 to 65 and older). Although these people had lost a lot of weight, it was apparent that they had much more to loose and had no muscle tone to speak of.
Some of the sites that I found that spoke against the hanging skin syndrome (my name for it) argue that fat is not lost evenly from the outside in (I guess they mean from the outer layers, close to the skin, towards the inner layers, close to the muscles). This would naturally cause the remaining fat cells close to the skin to weigh down and sag as the underlying fat the previously supported it no longer present (or reduced). They claim that people normally do not loose all the weight they could/should and once you are able to burn that fat as well, the skin adapts and conforms itself. One site (and this I found rather tasteless, but made me think nevertheless) even mentioned that there are no famine or war refugees ever with such a problem, even though it is incontestable that they did loose a lot of weight and too fast.
I also searched several "success story" sites, looking for people with similar profiles to my own. All the pictures posted were of the subjects fully dressed and, thus, could not give any clues regarding their skin situation. Not one of the stories related mentioned skin surgery or hanging skin, with the exception of a man who took part in a TV show called "Extreme Makeover" (or similar) who apparently did not have the endurance to undergo the diet and exercise program and opted for a gastric bypass surgery, liposuction and , then, the skin surgery...
I am 38, 5'9" and want/need to loose 100 lbs (from 264 to +/- 164). I have good muscle mass (not a body builder -I surf and bike-) and bone structure (wide shoulders), don't smoke and drink very little.
Does anyone out there know, for a fact, of the real consequences of weight loss on the skin? What is the skinny (pun intended) on those success stories?
Keep on loosing!
The only solutions offered/available seem to be acceptance or surgery.
However, no site offered a clear definition of how much "a lot" of weight is. Adjectives used are: Significant, massive, a lot, etc... but no hard figures are ever provided, nor are the demographics about the people themselves.
Some medical sites provided pictures (of pre and post-operatory pacients) of people who have lost 200+ lbs and seemed to be physically inactive, as well as "older" (another adjective without definition. My guess, from the pictures diplayed, were that they ranged from 45 to 65 and older). Although these people had lost a lot of weight, it was apparent that they had much more to loose and had no muscle tone to speak of.
Some of the sites that I found that spoke against the hanging skin syndrome (my name for it) argue that fat is not lost evenly from the outside in (I guess they mean from the outer layers, close to the skin, towards the inner layers, close to the muscles). This would naturally cause the remaining fat cells close to the skin to weigh down and sag as the underlying fat the previously supported it no longer present (or reduced). They claim that people normally do not loose all the weight they could/should and once you are able to burn that fat as well, the skin adapts and conforms itself. One site (and this I found rather tasteless, but made me think nevertheless) even mentioned that there are no famine or war refugees ever with such a problem, even though it is incontestable that they did loose a lot of weight and too fast.
I also searched several "success story" sites, looking for people with similar profiles to my own. All the pictures posted were of the subjects fully dressed and, thus, could not give any clues regarding their skin situation. Not one of the stories related mentioned skin surgery or hanging skin, with the exception of a man who took part in a TV show called "Extreme Makeover" (or similar) who apparently did not have the endurance to undergo the diet and exercise program and opted for a gastric bypass surgery, liposuction and , then, the skin surgery...
I am 38, 5'9" and want/need to loose 100 lbs (from 264 to +/- 164). I have good muscle mass (not a body builder -I surf and bike-) and bone structure (wide shoulders), don't smoke and drink very little.
Does anyone out there know, for a fact, of the real consequences of weight loss on the skin? What is the skinny (pun intended) on those success stories?
Keep on loosing!
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