Asia's heaviest woman sheds 214 kgs in four years!

Asias heaviest woman sheds 214 kgs in four years!
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Asia's heaviest woman sheds 214 kgs in four years!
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Once holding the dubious distinction of being Asia's heaviest woman weighing over 300 kgs, a woman from Maharashtra's Palghar has shed a staggering...

Once holding the dubious distinction of being Asia's heaviest woman weighing over 300 kgs, a woman from Maharashtra's Palghar has shed a staggering 214 kgs in four years, her bariatric surgeon Shashank Shah announced here on Wednesday. The woman was identified as Amita Rajani, 42, of Vasai town in Palghar, adjacent to Mumbai.

Her ordeal started at the age of 6 when she suddenly started piling up kilos though she was born a normal healthy baby of just 3 kg, Shah said. "By the time Amrita was 16, she was upward of 126 kgs, couldn't perform any of her real-world activities easily and the sheer weight bogged down her self-esteem," Shah, a world-renowned bariatric surgeon and founder of the LaparaObeso Centre at Lilivati Hospital, Bandra, said.

"I was totally bed-ridden earlier, but now I am completely independent, move around freely, wear clothes of my choice and lead the life I enjoy after Dr Shah helped me drop those excess kilos," Amrita said. The journey was not easy as even top endocrinologists from India and Britain were unable to fathom the exact cause of her obesity for years that prevented her from stepping out of her bed and home for eight years.

As medicos frantically hunted for the cause, Amrita continued to add weight and was soon 300 kg. She couldn't do anything without help of her family, suffered breathing issues and required oxygen support, and was nursed with scores of towels used daily.

Her now relieved mother, Mamta Rajani described the immense difficulties she encountered while taking care of her former heavyweight daughter. "I had to help her with all her chores, eating, dressing, controlling fluid retention with towels and bedsheets that soaked the excess fluid discharge.

But, now she is in shape and the full credit goes to Dr. Shah," she said. It was only when Amrita first visited Shah four years ago, around 2015 - stepping out of her home after almost a decade - that she sensed a glimmer of hope.

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