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Click
the above screenshot to watch Good Morning America's
interview with Sheila and Cyrus.
(requires macromedia flash player)
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Dr. Liu's Article on Good Morning America
With their weight severely straining their internal organs,
gastric bypass surgery was too dangerous. They had one hope:
lapband surgery — a new procedure in which a synthetic ring is
attached to the top of the stomach, reducing the size of the
opening from a silver dollar to a dime...
Sheila and Cyrus Tehrani won't put a price on their health and
happiness-even if it means mortgaging their home. Like countless
patients considering weight loss surgery, health insurance
companies repeatedly denied the Eagle Rock, CA residents
coverage for basic medical insurance as well as life-saving
bariatric surgery.
With 5'2" Sheila's weight
topping 546 lbs and 5'11" Cyrus' at 543 lbs, the brother and
sister refinanced their home in a last ditch effort to pay for
LAP-BAND® Adjustable Gastric Banding System surgery which was
performed by Dr. Carson Liu. |
"We are
playing Russian Roulette with our lives," said Sheila, 38, whose
lifelong obesity prohibits her from holding down a job or
driving a car.
"I feel like my life is stuck. It is only a matter
of time before my health deteriorates. I fell like our time is
running out."
"Unless I undergo this surgery, I am concerned I won't be around for
my wife and six children, ages 16, 15, 14, 8, 5 and 3," adds Cyrus,
34. "We are a tight-knit family; the thought of me not being there
for my children devastates me. This surgery is our last option and
is worth every penny."
Dr. Carson Liu successfully performed LAP-BAND® Adjustable Gastric
Banding System surgery on the siblings on Tuesday, June 7 at Olympia
Medical Center.
During the minimally invasive surgery, Dr. Liu made
only a few small incisions; reducing patients' hospital stay and
recuperation time. During the procedure, he implanted an inflatable
silicone band fastened around the upper stomach to create a new
stomach about the size of your thumb, reducing the amount of food
that can be eaten, and one's desire for it, resulting in weight
loss. The only adjustable weight loss surgery, the LAP-BAND can also
be adjusted to suit patients' needs.
"With a 108 body mass index, Sheila had the largest
BMI of any patient I have seen," said Dr. Liu, who has performed
more than 1900 weight loss surgeries.
"For morbidly obese patients who have failed at
numerous diets, surgery may be their only realistic option for
lasting weight loss. Cyrus and Sheila are expected to lose about
15-20 pounds per month until they reach their ideal weight."
The brother and sister's unique approach for
financing their surgery caught the attention of Los Angeles and
national media outlets. Wireless Flash News, an independent news
agency that provides exclusive feature and entertainment news to
radio and TV stations, newspapers, and magazines across the United
States and around the world, interviewed Dr. Liu shortly after the
Tehrani's surgery. The story was syndicated to more than 1400 print,
radio and TV affiliates in every major market across the United
States and overseas. (LAT)
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APPETITE FOR HUMOR: Siblings
Sheila and Cyrus Tehrani reminisce about what little they ate
for Thanksgiving 2005. |

A REACH: Nurse Caroline
DeOliveira measures Cyrus Tehrani’s waist during his monthly
checkup six months after surgery.
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MOTIVATED: Cyrus Tehrani lifts
weights at a gym in Pasadena six months after his surgery. Cyrus
is committed to regular exercise, despite time away from his
children. |

Cyrus Tehrani at a pre-surgery
checkup last spring by bariatric surgeon Dr. Carson Liu, left,
as sister Sheila watches. |

Step by Step, Losses Add Up to Gains
By Valerie Reitman, Times Staff Writer June 6, 2006
Sheila Tehrani dropped 48.2 pounds in four hours the other
day.
That brought her down to a comparatively svelte 387 pounds,
the first time in years that she's weighed less than 400.
The instant weight loss happened because surgeon Carson Liu
sliced off loose belly skin that had draped to Tehrani's
knees in the wake of her losing 144.2 pounds over the last
14 months.
When she awoke from the anesthesia, the extremities she
hadn't been able to see without a mirror came into view —
her own legs and toes.
"All I could think of is … my thighs look really fat,"
Sheila, 39, managed to joke the day after the surgery,
despite throbbing pain from her 4-foot hip-to-hip scar. The
drooping skin, she said, had made walking and driving
difficult.
Tehrani's flesh was whisked away in coolers to the airport,
en route to the nonprofit Musculoskeletal Transplant
Foundation in New Jersey, which plans to purify and reuse
the inner layer of the skin for hernia, pelvic and other
reconstructive surgical procedures.
The lop-off marked the latest chapter in the journey back to
health for Sheila and her brother Cyrus Tehrani, Eagle Rock
siblings who underwent Lap-Band surgery last year after a
cardiologist warned them that their weight (he tipped the
scales at 578, she at 579) was threatening their lives.
The decision came after Cyrus, now 35, was hospitalized for
several days in February 2005 with high blood pressure, leg
swelling and breathing problems caused by the excess weight.
The siblings refinanced their childhood home to pay for both
of them to have bariatric surgery, in which a synthetic ring
is used to reduce stomach capacity and make it impossible to
eat large quantities.
In the year since his surgery, Cyrus has lost 172 pounds,
and now weighs 406 pounds. Sheila weighed in at 434.8 before
last week's surgery.
A Column One article in The Times in January transformed the
Tehranis into minor celebrities, with appearances on the
Discovery Health Channel and shows such as "Good Morning
America" and "Entertainment Tonight/The Insider" (which
dubbed them the "half-ton Hollywood siblings," much to the
Tehranis' dismay).
In the months since the first surgery, Sheila said recently,
she has joked with the weight-loss surgery support group she
and Cyrus attend that she was there "to make Cyrus look
better," because he was losing so much more. She said she
struggled more with emotional issues that made it tough to
eat less.
Cyrus now steadfastly refuses to eat sweets and most
carbohydrates.
The night before he took wife Karen and four of his six
children to Disneyland recently — the first time he could
fit on rides since his 20s — Cyrus told Sheila he was
thinking of having funnel cakes. His sister, who advocates
careful portion control rather than absolute denial,
encouraged him to go ahead. He opted for a chocolate-dipped
banana instead and then ate only half because he actually
felt sick with guilt.
On her birthday in April, Sheila craved the
cream-and-strawberry cake from Ruby Bakery in Eagle Rock.
Her family obliged but cut her a piece "you could
practically see through," she said. But those few bites kept
her from feeling deprived.
"I'm not like Cy — diligent and militant like he is —
because I'm afraid if I'm like that, you'll find me covered
in wrappers, having eaten myself to death," she said.
About two months ago, Liu tightened Sheila's Lap-Band for
the second time since he implanted it, further cinching her
stomach and reducing the amount of food she can ingest.
(Cyrus will have his first tightening Wednesday.)
The tightening helped, she said. She couldn't eat much, and
she loved the difference on the scale. She lost 26 pounds in
the next two months. Exercising also has helped. She finally
got a long-talked-of treadmill, though finding a portable
one that could accommodate her weight wasn't easy.
With the machine set at 1 mile per hour, she at first could
only walk for about 10 minutes. She has now worked her way
up to 20 minutes at 1.7 mph a few times a week.
When she mentioned to family members that her sneakers were
rubbing against her skin, they all went out separately and
bought her socks — about a dozen pairs in all. The rest of
the Tehrani clan didn't want her to have any excuse for not
exercising.
"I'm the luckiest girl," she said of her family's support.

'I'M THE LUCKIEST GIRL’:
Accompanied by her 3-year-old niece, and with moral support
and a gifts of socks from her family, Sheila Tehrani walks
on a treadmill at her Eagle Rock home. At 1.7.mph, she has
worked her way up to 20 minutes a few times a week. |

NEXT CHAPTER: Roughly 48
pounds of skin and flesh were surgically removed from Sheila
Tehrani in a four-hour operation. Dr. Carson Liu, center,
headed the team. |

MOVING: Cyrus Tehrani, who
lost 172 pounds, walks with his youngest son. About a year
ago, he could go only a few yards before becoming winded. |

PRIME TIME: A crew from
"Entertainment Tonight" conducts an interview with Sheila
Tehrani just before her surgery to remove sagging skin. She
and her brother Cyrus made many TV appearances after they
got their Lap-Bands last year and began to lose weight. |

Just before surgery, Dr.
Carson Liu outlines the folds of skin to be removed from
Sheila Tehrani’s 5-foot, 2-inch frame. |

More than 48 pounds of skin
and flesh were surgically removed from Sheila Tehrani in a
four-hour operation. |
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Pictures taken at oBand Surgery Centers |
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click above to listen to the
interview |
Noted surgeon, Dr. Carson Liu and weight loss specialist Dr. Robert
Skervsky joined Dr. Berman to discuss weight loss options. What are
the benefits and cautions with bariatric surgery? How do you know if
this is the choice for you? What about other weight loss options? |
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