Finding Hope in Bariatric Surgery
On December 29, Robert Dunkerley went to the Veterans Affairs hospital in Butler, because he couldn’t breathe. The next thing he knew, it was February 6.
“I was in a coma for 40 days,” he says. “I woke up at UPMC Presbyterian in intensive care.” At 360 pounds, Robert’s weight was affecting his health.
He suffered from shortness of breath and sleep apnea. While he was in the hospital, he had a heart attack, which caused him to go into kidney failure. His right lung filled with fluid.
Robert spent most of the year in the hospital, leaving briefly to close the mortgage company he owned in Greenville. When he returned to the hospital in Butler for rehabilitation, the nurses told him they didn’t think he would live for another month.
“My case was as hopeless as you could have it,” he says. “When you’re heavy like that, at some point you feel like it’s hopeless. Then you have to make a decision.”
A Life-Changing Solution
In time, the Greenville-area native made a choice that would change his life: he went to the UPMC Horizon Minimally Invasive Bariatric and General Surgery Center.
He underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, which has helped him shed more than 120 pounds. Just six months later — on New Year’s Eve — Robert completed a 5K race.
“It took me one hour, two minutes, and 27 seconds, but I did it,” he says. “That, compared to not being able to walk 200 feet five years and two days earlier, is a real blessing.”
Robert says he has a lot of respect for UPMC Horizon’s bariatric surgery program.
Many patients do not realize their weight may contribute to other health problems. Sleep apnea, hypertension, and metabolic syndrome — risk factors that increase the chance of developing heart disease or diabetes — are all related to excess weight and can be improved, if not eliminated, by losing weight through bariatric procedures such as gastric bypass surgery.
Patients need to ask themselves:
- Are you on increasing doses of medication for these types of problems?
- Have you been seeing doctors for more than 10 years for these conditions?
- Do you keep adding more and more medication?
Winning His Battle
Robert can personally testify to the benefits of gastric bypass surgery.
Currently weighing 237 pounds, his health problems have almost disappeared. Although he still wears a sleep apnea mask at night — which, he says, he won’t need soon — his kidneys, heart, and lungs have all recovered.
He spends two hours each morning exercising with a fitness coach at the UPMC Horizon Wellness Center, plans to play golf with his grandson, and is gearing up for another 5K race.
His ultimate goal is to weigh less than 180 pounds. Once he gets to that weight, he says, he will have surgery to remove excess skin, which can total up to 15 pounds on its own.
Every month, Robert attends weight loss surgery support group meetings where he shares his story with others who are contemplating bariatric surgery. He says his only regret is that he didn’t have gastric bypass surgery five years earlier.
“I’m on a big high every day,” he says. “On a scale of one to 10, I’m a 15. I’m ready to burst.”
Note: This patient's treatment and results may not be representative of all similar cases.
Read more gastric bypass patient stories.