Guest guest Posted May 28, 2006 Report Share Posted May 28, 2006 , I started having cholangitis attacks in 1994. I wasn't diagnosed until 1998. I didn't have any antibiotics for all those years unless I happened to be on them for another reason...I feel exceedingly lucky that I made it through that time because I've since read the abysmal statistics on untreated cholangitis attacks leading to sepsis...I'd push for antibiotics as soon as you start an attack. HTH, Deb in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2006 Report Share Posted May 28, 2006 , I started having cholangitis attacks in 1994. I wasn't diagnosed until 1998. I didn't have any antibiotics for all those years unless I happened to be on them for another reason...I feel exceedingly lucky that I made it through that time because I've since read the abysmal statistics on untreated cholangitis attacks leading to sepsis...I'd push for antibiotics as soon as you start an attack. HTH, Deb in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2006 Report Share Posted May 28, 2006 , I started having cholangitis attacks in 1994. I wasn't diagnosed until 1998. I didn't have any antibiotics for all those years unless I happened to be on them for another reason...I feel exceedingly lucky that I made it through that time because I've since read the abysmal statistics on untreated cholangitis attacks leading to sepsis...I'd push for antibiotics as soon as you start an attack. HTH, Deb in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2006 Report Share Posted May 28, 2006 Deb, Your help has been tremendous so far, even if it's not what I want to hear. Interesting now about the sepsis. From spring of 2004 until maybe January this year, I noticed no symptoms whatsoever. No attacks. No thyroid issues. Perfectly fine. Still didn't drink alcohol for fear of bringing on an attack, but I felt good. Two weeks postpartum in early September, I had a very high fever. It didn't feel like an attack, it felt more like I might have been dealing with a clogged milk duct. Anyway, I didn't have any pain, just the fever. But the fever was - no exaggeration - 104.7. And I had been taking fever reducers. My OBGYN put me on an antibiotic, but I had to follow up with my family doc. She put me on two different antibiotics, and she considered hospitalizing me because she was afraid of sepsis. I believe my liver levels were fine for that time, but they did find bilirubin in my urine. Blood was pretty clean, though. The fever responded to the antibiotics, and nothing else was said or done about it. So here's where I am now... I won't have an appointment with the liver specialist until June 8. I am fully expecting an attack this upcoming week because I should be starting my period about June 7. I have no diagnosis yet. My question is, as long as these are mild episodes, am I okay just surviving it by myself? Or would my family doc be able to provide me with an antibiotic specifically for these occasions? These last four months the attacks have been very mild. I haven't felt the need to take an antacid, and the fever has been under 100. Certainly not ER conditions. Should I call my family doc on Tuesday and see if there's any way she can see me and prescribe an antibiotic? How much damage is being done when it's untreated, even if it's not a severe attack? I can't begin to thank you for all of your info. So far, you seem to mirror what I am experiencing. Unfortunately for you, I think these questions are just going to be the tip of the iceberg. You can imagine the list that I'm building when it comes to thinking about the ERCP, drugs, transplants... lord. > > , > I started having cholangitis attacks in 1994. I wasn't diagnosed until > 1998. I didn't have any antibiotics for all those years unless I > happened to be on them for another reason...I feel exceedingly lucky > that I made it through that time because I've since read the abysmal > statistics on untreated cholangitis attacks leading to sepsis...I'd > push for antibiotics as soon as you start an attack. > > HTH, > Deb in VA > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2006 Report Share Posted May 28, 2006 Deb, Your help has been tremendous so far, even if it's not what I want to hear. Interesting now about the sepsis. From spring of 2004 until maybe January this year, I noticed no symptoms whatsoever. No attacks. No thyroid issues. Perfectly fine. Still didn't drink alcohol for fear of bringing on an attack, but I felt good. Two weeks postpartum in early September, I had a very high fever. It didn't feel like an attack, it felt more like I might have been dealing with a clogged milk duct. Anyway, I didn't have any pain, just the fever. But the fever was - no exaggeration - 104.7. And I had been taking fever reducers. My OBGYN put me on an antibiotic, but I had to follow up with my family doc. She put me on two different antibiotics, and she considered hospitalizing me because she was afraid of sepsis. I believe my liver levels were fine for that time, but they did find bilirubin in my urine. Blood was pretty clean, though. The fever responded to the antibiotics, and nothing else was said or done about it. So here's where I am now... I won't have an appointment with the liver specialist until June 8. I am fully expecting an attack this upcoming week because I should be starting my period about June 7. I have no diagnosis yet. My question is, as long as these are mild episodes, am I okay just surviving it by myself? Or would my family doc be able to provide me with an antibiotic specifically for these occasions? These last four months the attacks have been very mild. I haven't felt the need to take an antacid, and the fever has been under 100. Certainly not ER conditions. Should I call my family doc on Tuesday and see if there's any way she can see me and prescribe an antibiotic? How much damage is being done when it's untreated, even if it's not a severe attack? I can't begin to thank you for all of your info. So far, you seem to mirror what I am experiencing. Unfortunately for you, I think these questions are just going to be the tip of the iceberg. You can imagine the list that I'm building when it comes to thinking about the ERCP, drugs, transplants... lord. > > , > I started having cholangitis attacks in 1994. I wasn't diagnosed until > 1998. I didn't have any antibiotics for all those years unless I > happened to be on them for another reason...I feel exceedingly lucky > that I made it through that time because I've since read the abysmal > statistics on untreated cholangitis attacks leading to sepsis...I'd > push for antibiotics as soon as you start an attack. > > HTH, > Deb in VA > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 Expecially with the vomiting, I would want to rule out pancreatitis - it often goes undiagnosed...and I had an extreme case (necotizing pancreatitis) and survived it and now have it chronically --- anyhow for anyone dealing with it, I found that digestive enzymes WITH prilosec really help, the idea is to support the pancreas so it doesn't have to work so hard .. I get back pain across my rib cage, nausea (I don't often vomit, but know that's a symptom) ... and fatty foods are a culprit (also fatty foods make the gallbladder have to work - to break down the fats - so if bile ducts are clogged, I suppose that could cause pain too??? Layman's explanation, not DR)... anyhow, hot baths also really help the pain as does heating pad across the back...I've been hospitalized for this and its REALLY painful when not in control ... had to be on morphine, etc for months and other pain killers for years...which by the way, I found a FANTASTIC alternative/holistic doctor at the New Life Health Center in Jamaica Plain, MA (outside Boston) who took away the pain within days and really helped my overall disgestive systom ... I was down to 95 pounds and few red blood platlets...he was successfully treating people with all kinds of digestive diseases as well as cancers...I highly recommend him, AND, you can call and he's honest about what he feels he can help and what not ... (Dr. Lee) does accupunture, herbal rememedies, holds daily mini seminars on your health ... great place to heal...He brought me back from the brink of death, honestly... I haven't yet asked him to treat my PSC, but may do that at some point ... I'm thinking he may be able to help with the fatigue...as I said, he really saved my life. > , > > My initial experience with cholangitis attacks was similar to yours, > ... > > Tim - > What confounds and confuses me is that my son, and it seems some > others too, have similar abdominal pain, but different. For years, > has had what we thought was " extreme " GERD, reflux. Sometimes > his abdominal pain is substernal chest pain, sometimes vomiting, > sometimes pain across his entire rib cage. In the past six months it > is much worse and more frequent. In past Ranitidine helped (unless he > ate really fatty food - then he would just vomit). Now he requires > daily Prilosec and still has intermittent symptoms. At times is on > twice daily Prilosec. His GI thinks it is esophageal spasm. > > Maybe it is that now I know he has PSC, so I am convinced that PSC has > something to do with it! His symptoms now are often worse at night. > Sometimes he is just nauseous for a day, or two, or three - yuck! > > I wish we could do some complex statistical analysis of everyone's > upper GI symtpoms (I know the colitis adds complexity) to see if any > patterns emerge or to at least see the range of symtpoms. Be > interesting to see what works for different people too. > > Joanne > (, Ca; mom of , 15, UC/PSC 2-06; " GERD " 2002; JRA 1999) > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 , I would see what your family doctor thinks. Tell him/her the situation and how you believe that these might be cholangitis attacks based on what you've read and how the specialist is pursuing your diagnosis. (I wouldn't necessarily mention anything about your period - I've found that depending on the doc, that can limit your credibility - sad to say, I know.) See what he/she says. At the very least, I'd keep a thermometer handy and monitor your symptoms closely once one started to see if you were getting sick enough to consider the ER. I would hate to tell you not to worry about it and then have this be the time that something dire happened... I hope this helps. When you get into making tough decisions like that, it is hard to say one way or another without being a doctor myself. Hang in there... Deb in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 , I would see what your family doctor thinks. Tell him/her the situation and how you believe that these might be cholangitis attacks based on what you've read and how the specialist is pursuing your diagnosis. (I wouldn't necessarily mention anything about your period - I've found that depending on the doc, that can limit your credibility - sad to say, I know.) See what he/she says. At the very least, I'd keep a thermometer handy and monitor your symptoms closely once one started to see if you were getting sick enough to consider the ER. I would hate to tell you not to worry about it and then have this be the time that something dire happened... I hope this helps. When you get into making tough decisions like that, it is hard to say one way or another without being a doctor myself. Hang in there... Deb in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 Thanks again. I have been spending a lot of time reading back posts here. I'm going to just hold out to hear from my liver guy. If it's a bad episode this week, I'll go right to the ER with my suspicions. > > , > I would see what your family doctor thinks. Tell him/her the situation > and how you believe that these might be cholangitis attacks based on > what you've read and how the specialist is pursuing your diagnosis. (I > wouldn't necessarily mention anything about your period - I've found > that depending on the doc, that can limit your credibility - sad to > say, I know.) See what he/she says. At the very least, I'd keep a > thermometer handy and monitor your symptoms closely once one started > to see if you were getting sick enough to consider the ER. I would > hate to tell you not to worry about it and then have this be the time > that something dire happened... > > I hope this helps. When you get into making tough decisions like that, > it is hard to say one way or another without being a doctor myself. > > Hang in there... > Deb in VA > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 Thanks again. I have been spending a lot of time reading back posts here. I'm going to just hold out to hear from my liver guy. If it's a bad episode this week, I'll go right to the ER with my suspicions. > > , > I would see what your family doctor thinks. Tell him/her the situation > and how you believe that these might be cholangitis attacks based on > what you've read and how the specialist is pursuing your diagnosis. (I > wouldn't necessarily mention anything about your period - I've found > that depending on the doc, that can limit your credibility - sad to > say, I know.) See what he/she says. At the very least, I'd keep a > thermometer handy and monitor your symptoms closely once one started > to see if you were getting sick enough to consider the ER. I would > hate to tell you not to worry about it and then have this be the time > that something dire happened... > > I hope this helps. When you get into making tough decisions like that, > it is hard to say one way or another without being a doctor myself. > > Hang in there... > Deb in VA > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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