Loose skin
MrsHyde604
Posts: 4 Member
I'm 22 and 330 lbs. I've been on a low carb diet for a week now and have at least an 800 calorie deficit a day. I'm a new mom and am exercising when I get a chance. I've had a lot of illnesses in life and used to weigh well over 400 pounds. My question is, what can I do to ensure I don't have a crap ton of loose skin at the end of my journey? I've been big for a long time and this concerns me greatly.
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Replies
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Going from 400 lbs. to a normal range BMI? About all you can do is hope like hell that you have the best skin elasticity genetics in the world. Honestly, with that kind of starting point, your odds of not ending up with skin flaps are somewhere between slim and none.7
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Oh, I know it's going to happen. I just want to do whatever it takes to make it happen as little as possible.0
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I wish you the greatest success in your weight loss journey. Should you get lose skin, carry it like a badge of honor on your otherwise toned body!
Consider Eric Naiman's journey, as chronicled in pictures:
http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/watch-myfitnesspal-user-lose-176-pounds-2-years-1-photo-per-day/6 -
Being only 22, you have a better chance than most that your skin will rebound well, but it does take time. You will likely lose faster initially, so you may have loose skin as the tightening may not keep pace. Many say it can still tighten for 1 or 2 years after you reach your final weight.4
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MrsHyde604 wrote: »Oh, I know it's going to happen. I just want to do whatever it takes to make it happen as little as possible.
In that case, do it when you're 22 and don't wait until you're 54, like me. Skin elasticity declines with increasing age.
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There's NOTHING you can do physically to stop it from happening. How it happens is based on genetics, how much you have to lose, and time. If I'm being honest, with that much to lose, unless you're close to 6 feet tall, there's likely going to be a lot of loose skin.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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Look into a collagen/gelatin supplement, internal powder form, not creams.
Great Lakes brand do a good one.0 -
Loose the weight gradually. Make sure you don't loose more than 2 pounds a week. Also they make creams that can help from what I hear you can look into that?? Goodluck though1
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I just want to say good luck to you. Your story inspires me. Don't ever forget your WHY! Why you are doing this. The WHY is way more important then the results. The why gets you to the gym when you like *kitten*. The why keeps you eating clean when you hit a roadblock in your weight loss. Your Why doesn't care about flabby skin or tight abs your why just cares about you1
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I went from 330lbs to 242lbs and have some loose skin on the body, its not a massive deal at all, I feel and look better and skin can always be fixed up later, like eating an icecream sundae and worrying a peanut will get stuck between your teeth :P1
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I have personal experience on large weight loss: I did it slow over 7 years. My body doesn't have loose saggy skin. How ever I still do have body fat. I'm trying to loose. Lost of resistance exercising will help you tone a lot of your skin. It has worked for me and improved a lot.0
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At 330 pounds, you have time to start now and save for surgery to remove the loose skin. It's not a vanity thing or an admission of failure; it's just being practical, and lots of people who have slimmed down from morbid obesity do it. If you start saving now, then if you get down to a normal BMI and decide you don't need or want the surgery after all, you'll have a nice nest egg for a celebratory vacation or something.1
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Christine_72 wrote: »Look into a collagen/gelatin supplement, internal powder form, not creams.
Great Lakes brand do a good one.
(1) This ^^^^ - take 1 serving twice a day. (2) Pair that with exercise (specifically strength training). (3) Pray. (4) According to most plastic surgeon websites that I've read articles about lose skin on, understand that whatever amount of shrinkage or tightening up that your skin may do after you've eliminated a huge amount of weight can take up to 2 - 2.5 YEARS to catch up with your body's weight-loss.1
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