Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

's sed rate

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Hi everyone,I took to the drs, her sed rate went up from 19

to 45 Iwas worried I ask the dr could a sed rate go up from a sinus

infection,she said it could go up but not that much she didn,t give

me advice really,so Im asking anyone that can try to answer

this. goes back the 22 and the weekend before her appt she

needs to get more blood work,right now has some kind of flu

she has been throwing up quite alot its hard to keep food down I

wonder if this illness can make the sed rate?Im very worried about

this sed rate.Im really confused about jra sed rates everything,it

just seems she is more sick than not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

, Yes, when you are sick your sed rate can go up. It can also

take a few weeks to go down if you have been sick or have had an infection.

The CRP, or c reactive protein can tell you more if you have been sick. It

is also an indicator of inflammation. (n, 15, systemic)

p.s. Try not to get too hung up with sed rate numbers. I go by how my

child feels. When her arthritis is active I could care less what the sed

rate is, all I know is that my child feels bad. If n is doing well,

again if the sed rate is high- I don't care. What I am trying to say is

that, go with how your child is feeling and is her health generally getting

better or worse.

's sed rate

>

>

> Hi everyone,I took to the drs, her sed rate went up from 19

> to 45 Iwas worried I ask the dr could a sed rate go up from a sinus

> infection,she said it could go up but not that much she didn,t give

> me advice really,so Im asking anyone that can try to answer

> this. goes back the 22 and the weekend before her appt she

> needs to get more blood work,right now has some kind of flu

> she has been throwing up quite alot its hard to keep food down I

> wonder if this illness can make the sed rate?Im very worried about

> this sed rate.Im really confused about jra sed rates everything,it

> just seems she is more sick than not.

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi ,

I just read your post about your daughter ...I know a lot

about sed rates (as do most parents on this list), as my son

was diagnosed at a year of age with systemic jra and is now 5.

Infections may increase the sed rate a little...but the trend is

pretty indicative of what is going on (inflammation, rash, fever,

pain, etc.) ' sed rate was as high as 115 when he was

flaring...and never fell below 30's until we started him on Kineret

(a year later his sed rate is 8...and reflects a little boy who is

feeling great). I wasn't sure how long has had systemic

symptoms, age, treatment, etc.? If you have any questions about

systemic jra please email me directly at mwestfal " at " ktc.com.

Sincerely, Marguerite and (systemic, 5)

>

> Hi everyone,I took to the drs, her sed rate went up from 19

> to 45 Iwas worried I ask the dr could a sed rate go up from a

sinus

> infection,she said it could go up but not that much she didn,t give

> me advice really,so Im asking anyone that can try to answer

> this. goes back the 22 and the weekend before her appt she

> needs to get more blood work,right now has some kind of flu

> she has been throwing up quite alot its hard to keep food down I

> wonder if this illness can make the sed rate?Im very worried about

> this sed rate.Im really confused about jra sed rates everything,it

> just seems she is more sick than not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi ,

The SED is a tricky kind of test.It reads what was going on about two weeks

prior to the test and can stay elevated 2 weeks after the inflimation has gone

down.

Ask or demand to have a CRP done with each lab.It measures inflimation at

that exact moment the labs are drawn.

Any lab can become messed up from sitting to long or at the wrong temp.

I can swear my son was in a 100% total medicated remission for a year and a

year afterwards when he developed a viral rash and cellulitis and his SED came

back a 45.The blood tests were done the day before the appointment and the

rheumy found nothing but a perfect child.

It's a good test but not a perfect test and the whole overall picture of the

labs is what counts the most.

Hugs

Becki and 6systemic

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...