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Results 1 - 10 of 36 for Staple food
  1. ... by closing off most of your stomach with staples. It changed the way your body handles the food you eat. You will eat less food, and ...
  2. ... of your stomach are joined together using surgical staples. This creates a long vertical tube or banana-shaped stomach. The surgery does not involve cutting or changing the sphincter muscles that allow food to enter or leave the stomach. The scope ...
  3. ... step makes your stomach smaller. Your surgeon uses staples to divide your stomach into a small upper section and a larger bottom section. The top section of your stomach (called the pouch) is where the food you eat will go. The pouch is about ...
  4. ... slowly add in soft foods , and then regular foods.
  5. ... to help you lose weight. Your surgeon used staples to divide your ... stomach pouch. The food you eat will now go into your small ...
  6. ... 2 days. The incisions are closed with stitches (sutures).
  7. ... shampoo your child's head until the stitches and staples have ... eat normal foods after going home unless the provider tells you ...
  8. ... may increase bleeding. You will have staples or sutures in the ... it. Healing time will depend on how much tissue was removed.
  9. ... strip of bone is usually removed where two sutures are fused. This is called a strip craniectomy. ... bones. The connections between these bones are called sutures. When a baby is born, it is normal ...
  10. ... get worse than it should. You may have staples in the wound, or dissolving stitches under the ... the wound dressings (bandages) and take showers if sutures (stitches), staples, or glue were used to close ...
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