Always Hungry Girl Gets 'Childhood' Back After Weight Loss Surgery - East Idaho News

Always Hungry Girl Gets ‘Childhood’ Back After Weight Loss Surgery

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ht alexis shapiro kb 140321 16x9 992?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1418497138272Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center(CINCINNATI) — A Texas girl who couldn’t stop eating has lost more than 50 pounds after undergoing gastrectomy surgery at age 12.

Alexis Shapiro ballooned from just 50 pounds to more than 200 pounds after undergoing surgery to remove a benign brain tumor left her with a rare condition called hypothalamic obesity, which caused her to always feel hungry.

HT Alexis Shapiro nt 131230 4x3 992?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1418497308356Before surgery, Alexis Shapiro weighed just over 51 pounds. (Courtesy Jennifer Shapiro)

Her family turned to surgical options after trying to control her ballooning weight with exercise and diet plan.

Earlier this year Alexis became one of the youngest people in the U.S. to undergo a sleeve gastrectomy surgery.

The surgery was supposed to be a full gastric bypass, but because Alexis’ liver was enlarged, doctors in the operating room decided to try a gastric sleeve, which reduced Alexis’ stomach to just 25 percent of its original size.

Seven months after the surgery, Alexis’ mother said that her daughter’s health has improved remarkably and that she has her “childhood” back.

In a post on the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital website, Jenny Shapiro said her daughter lost at least 55 pounds and no longer needed to take medication for her type 2 diabetes.

“She has had zero hospital stays related to hypothalamic obesity, which is a record since her brain surgery three years ago,” Shapiro wrote.

The 2011 surgery removed the tumor but damaged parts of Alexis’ brain, including the pituitary gland and the hypothalamus, which affect how her body perceives signals from her digestive system.

“We’ve also seen wonderful growth in Alexis’ independence, strength and stamina,” said Shapiro. “She loves her school work and even recently joined an after-school club. I’m so happy to be able to see her get back parts of her childhood that she once enjoyed so much but had lost while she was so sick.”

In a statement posted to a Facebook documenting Alexis’ recovery, Jenny Shapiro said her daughter still struggles with her engery but manages to walk a half mile to school every weekday.

“She likes learning!” Shapiro wrote. “She is still scared to try new things that she couldn’t do while she was much heavier, but we are trying.”



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