Guest guest Posted June 17, 1998 Report Share Posted June 17, 1998 Hi Supermoms, I called Matt's GI doc today to give him an update. He is still having one or two wet burps a day despite being on Zantac and Cisapride and also he had a Nissen a couple of years ago. Who know how many times he is refluxing less severely during the day in addition to the wet burps. So, I asked what was next. Doc wants me to maximize the dose of cisapride (6 cc q.i.d) for the next month and then call him back. He says that if the cisapride stops the wet burps then probably the reflux is due to the Nissen failure rather than eosinophilic esophagitis. But, if he is still having wet burps despite the maximum cisapride dosage then he will need a scope to see what the current eosinophil status is. Does eosinophilic esophagitis just " go away " ? Or is it something that can recur? He is reluctant to go the route of the strict withdrawal of all of those food in Matt's diet because a) Matt is growing and gaining weight well; he is a happy, asymptomatic kid (i.e., no pain) and c) he has a healthy appetite. The doc said that sometimes kids " outgrow " their Nissens-- the wrap somehow doesn't stay perfectly functional as the inside of the body grows with the child. Well geez, that's the first time he mentioned that one! The surgeon sure didn't mention that, I do know that! So, here I sit trying to figure out what to do next. Four times a day meds are so hard for me to keep up with! Does anybody have any good techniques for remembering meds that need four times a day dosing? Maybe a watch with an alarm clock? And is there something else I should be asking for? His last barium swallow was two years ago. His last scope was Jan, 1997. I asked if he thought maybe Matt would need a revision of his Nissen and he said no, that Matt would just be managed medically. This sounds so, so, inadequate. Keep in mind that my concern is that Matt has a history of Barret's metaplasia from the esophagitis (this is considered pre-cancerous in the adult) and I sure don't want to be grappling with that again any time soon. I hung up the phone, thought about it for a few minutes, and then called Dr. 's office for an appointment for a second opinion. Lynda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 1998 Report Share Posted June 17, 1998 In a message dated 98-06-17 22:00:09 EDT, you write: << I hung up the phone, thought about it for a few minutes, and then called Dr. 's office for an appointment for a second opinion. >> Lynda: When are you going to see Dr. . We will be there tomorrow for the insertion of Claytons ph probe and then for our monthly appointment and removal of the ph probe on Friday. You will love Dr.. SHaron P.S. ANGELA, i do not have access to my main computer can you re-email me your snail mail address so I can send the package to you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 1998 Report Share Posted June 17, 1998 Amy (mom to 6yr old girl, 33 mon son, eosinophilic esophagitis,nissen, gtube, food allergies) drawe@... Lynda: you write.... Keep in mind that my concern is that Matt has a history of Barret's metaplasia from > the esophagitis (this is considered pre-cancerous in the adult) and I sure > don't want to be grappling with that again any time soon. Can you explain the Barret's link with esophagitis? Does he have that? Is is directly linked to Eosin. Esoph. I am just way curious to know because I have tried to get an answer from our docs regarding this. I wonder if it doesn't get under control will this condition link to the Barret's or is there other factors to consider???? The answer I get is this... " The short answer is no the long answer is we don't know " . Real comforting reply! Anywa just wondering if you have had this cleared up for you. Good luck with the second opinion. Amy (7 yr.old daughter, 3 yr old son, esoino. esophagitis, nissen, gtube, food allergy) drawe@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 1998 Report Share Posted June 17, 1998 Good idea on the second opinion. Yes, eos esophagitis does recur. THe kids who are treated with Flovent (fluticasone),evidently just need a few weeks backon therapy and it takes care of symptoms. Our oldest had his Nissen 11 years ago and it is still intact (he is 15 now). If your child has only eos esophag and not gastroenteritis you should definitely ask about Flovent therapy. GOod luck SJHarlow@... http://www.c4isr.com/harlow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 1998 Report Share Posted June 18, 1998 In a message dated 98-06-18 03:48:19 EDT, you write: << Can you explain the Barret's link with esophagitis? Does he have that? Is is directly linked to Eosin. Esoph. I am just way curious to know because I have tried to get an answer from our docs regarding this. >> I am not sure I understand your question, so ask again if I haven't answered the right question! The lining in the esophagus is not made up of the same type of cells as are present in the stomach and intestines. The ones in the intestines and stomach are " tough " enough to withstand stomach acids, the esophagus is not. When an esophagus is chronically inflamed, sometimes the body tries to respond by changing the cells themselves so they become " tougher " and can withstand the acid better. This change is histiologically called metaplasia. Biopsies will state " intestinal metaplasia " or Barret's metaplasia of the esophagus, which means that the cells in the distal esophagus are structurally changing to become more like the cells lining the intestine. The problem is that this condition is considered pre-cancerous in the adult; last time I asked my son's GI doc about it he said the clinical significance of it in a child is unknown--IOW, they don't know how long adults with cancer of the esophagus lived with Barrett's metaplasia before it advanced into actual cancer. But for a child, the presence of Barrett's metaplasia is an automatic clinical indicator for a fundoplication. I do not know if all chronic esophagitis eventually progresses to Barret's metaplasia but it is one of the reasons for periodic surveillance with the scope. (We tried the protracted courses with Prilosec to clear it up twice, and the Prilosec did clear it up but each time it returned. So the fundo was done.) Lynda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 1998 Report Share Posted June 18, 1998 In a message dated 98-06-17 22:59:54 EDT, you write: << When are you going to see Dr. . >> Sometime in July, towards the end of the month, I think. I will let you know as the time gets closer to see if you will be there, too. Lynda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 1998 Report Share Posted June 18, 1998 Lynda: If you know the date and the time that you are going to dr. kelly let me know today or tonight as when i have my monthly appointment for June tomorrow I will make my appointment for July. I usually go on Wednesdays in the early morning between 9 and 10 am. Love. Sharon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 1998 Report Share Posted June 18, 1998 I can answer the question about Barrett's and eos esophagitis. There is no KNOWN link in either adults or children; however,there is very little known about the mechanism that causes eos esohpagitis to begin with. I ll let you know in about 30 years if any of the 6 of us have developed Barretts!!!LOL SJHarlow@... http://www.c4isr.com/harlow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2004 Report Share Posted January 14, 2004 Hi : Boy this sounds familiar. My oldest son, , has had trouble with handwriting. He does have some fine motor skills issues; but not enough to get OT in school. And he has headaches. And he complained of leg pains in third grade. We had his legs xrayed, nothing showed up. We took him to Leah's ped neurologist because of the headaches. He did have an MRI, CAT Scan, and blood workup done because of the issues with Leah. But nothing showed up. Our neuro feels it is migraines and we treat with Motrin at school when he gets a headache. He is allowed to go down to the nurses office takes the motrin and lays down for about 20 minutes and goes back to class. I truly believe the headaches are caused from stress; even though may not feel like it. Even though your daughter says everything is fine at school there could be more stress on her than she realizes. And may be she doesn't really like what is going on in gym. And could this have all come on after you are now dealing more with Gracie's issues? I know was having big time problems at home after Leah was born (and we were only dealing with cleft palate at that time) and he was complaining, crying, etc. I thought it was kindergarten even though he was only going half days. It finally came out one night after talking about different things that he shouted at us-It's Leah!! So we took a step back and thought now we need to deal with this. In third grade we did have see a counselor to talk about a lot of stuff and now we know about pushing his feelings way down and then he will let them out over some thing so small. Yes, I too worried that this could be the "soft" signs of mito coming on. But now I'm not trying to worry about his headaches and dealing with his other issues. We see an OT specialist during our summer vacation. And that has helped alot. I believe we get worried when we see these signs that could be mito and they could be other issues with our children. A lot of children get headaches, leg pains because of growing issues; but we take it a step farther and say....could it be? Which is ok. We need to stay on top of these things with our kids. So what I'm saying is talk to your doctor about what is going on. That is the first step we did. It could be related and it could be school and your daughter doesn't know how to communicate what is really going on in her mind. And keep a journal of when she gets these headaches and may be have the teacher at school do that too so you can pinpoint what is happening during the day. Is it before she eats, could it be low blood sugar? And don't make a big deal about low energy activities. Each child is different there, too. My older son, , loves to play with little things, computer and be by himself some days while his brother, , loves to play with other kids and active games if it is his choice. My husband and I say they are night and day our two boys. Preliminary bloodwork would be I believe lactic acid and pyruvate. Let me know how it goes and if you have any questions of how things are with now, you can email me via the group or privately. It just sounds so much like what we were going through since Kindergarten with and still are dealing with things with him and he is 11 years old. Good luck . Nerenhausen mom to Leah albregra@... wrote: Hello all! As most of you know, my daughter Grace is affected with a nonspecific mito. Up until lately, I felt so lucky that I had three other "healthy children." The oldest of my birth children, (6), has started having some strange problems. I do not know if it can be linked to mito or not. This is why I came to you, the experts. First of all she had some behavior problems in Kindergarten, but we switched her from full day to half day and life was fine. She is now in first grade, and her behavior is great. We get no bad reports from her teacher, until today. I got a phone call from her gym teacher. She tells me refuses to participate, telling her all the time she does not feel well. Her classroom teacher has told me that she does complain of headaches a lot, but it is not a problem in his class. Her gym class is late in the day, 2:30. When she gets home she is usually pretty irritable, until I give her a snack to hold her off until dinner. After dinner she is fine. Then when it comes to nighttime she has a ton of headaches. She really seems like she is in a lot of pain. They get so bad sometimes it will put her in tears. She will almost always be in bed with them. I do not think it is her eyes, she wears glasses and just got new ones. I hoped the new glasses would help, but they have not changed the situation at all. Also she gets leg spasms a lot. I have seen them and her legs just shake uncontrollably. She says it causes pain when this happens. Oh yeah and back to school. Her teacher also has referred her to an OT, because she is having a horrible time with handwriting. Her teacher and I both agree it is not lack of effort, she just cannot write neatly. He was concerned even before hearing of her sisters illness. I just wonder if some of this may be mito related. It seems odd that most of her problems start after 5 ho urs of school. On the weekends she is fine. She is never overly active, but plays. She spends a lot of time playing barbies and reading, all low energy activities. This is why I wonder if she could have a problem. I did make an appointment for tomorrow night with her pediatrician. If anyone has suggestions on some preliminary bloodwork, I would appreciate it. Thanks Again. Please contact mito-owner with any problems or questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2004 Report Share Posted January 14, 2004 Hi : Boy this sounds familiar. My oldest son, , has had trouble with handwriting. He does have some fine motor skills issues; but not enough to get OT in school. And he has headaches. And he complained of leg pains in third grade. We had his legs xrayed, nothing showed up. We took him to Leah's ped neurologist because of the headaches. He did have an MRI, CAT Scan, and blood workup done because of the issues with Leah. But nothing showed up. Our neuro feels it is migraines and we treat with Motrin at school when he gets a headache. He is allowed to go down to the nurses office takes the motrin and lays down for about 20 minutes and goes back to class. I truly believe the headaches are caused from stress; even though may not feel like it. Even though your daughter says everything is fine at school there could be more stress on her than she realizes. And may be she doesn't really like what is going on in gym. And could this have all come on after you are now dealing more with Gracie's issues? I know was having big time problems at home after Leah was born (and we were only dealing with cleft palate at that time) and he was complaining, crying, etc. I thought it was kindergarten even though he was only going half days. It finally came out one night after talking about different things that he shouted at us-It's Leah!! So we took a step back and thought now we need to deal with this. In third grade we did have see a counselor to talk about a lot of stuff and now we know about pushing his feelings way down and then he will let them out over some thing so small. Yes, I too worried that this could be the "soft" signs of mito coming on. But now I'm not trying to worry about his headaches and dealing with his other issues. We see an OT specialist during our summer vacation. And that has helped alot. I believe we get worried when we see these signs that could be mito and they could be other issues with our children. A lot of children get headaches, leg pains because of growing issues; but we take it a step farther and say....could it be? Which is ok. We need to stay on top of these things with our kids. So what I'm saying is talk to your doctor about what is going on. That is the first step we did. It could be related and it could be school and your daughter doesn't know how to communicate what is really going on in her mind. And keep a journal of when she gets these headaches and may be have the teacher at school do that too so you can pinpoint what is happening during the day. Is it before she eats, could it be low blood sugar? And don't make a big deal about low energy activities. Each child is different there, too. My older son, , loves to play with little things, computer and be by himself some days while his brother, , loves to play with other kids and active games if it is his choice. My husband and I say they are night and day our two boys. Preliminary bloodwork would be I believe lactic acid and pyruvate. Let me know how it goes and if you have any questions of how things are with now, you can email me via the group or privately. It just sounds so much like what we were going through since Kindergarten with and still are dealing with things with him and he is 11 years old. Good luck . Nerenhausen mom to Leah albregra@... wrote: Hello all! As most of you know, my daughter Grace is affected with a nonspecific mito. Up until lately, I felt so lucky that I had three other "healthy children." The oldest of my birth children, (6), has started having some strange problems. I do not know if it can be linked to mito or not. This is why I came to you, the experts. First of all she had some behavior problems in Kindergarten, but we switched her from full day to half day and life was fine. She is now in first grade, and her behavior is great. We get no bad reports from her teacher, until today. I got a phone call from her gym teacher. She tells me refuses to participate, telling her all the time she does not feel well. Her classroom teacher has told me that she does complain of headaches a lot, but it is not a problem in his class. Her gym class is late in the day, 2:30. When she gets home she is usually pretty irritable, until I give her a snack to hold her off until dinner. After dinner she is fine. Then when it comes to nighttime she has a ton of headaches. She really seems like she is in a lot of pain. They get so bad sometimes it will put her in tears. She will almost always be in bed with them. I do not think it is her eyes, she wears glasses and just got new ones. I hoped the new glasses would help, but they have not changed the situation at all. Also she gets leg spasms a lot. I have seen them and her legs just shake uncontrollably. She says it causes pain when this happens. Oh yeah and back to school. Her teacher also has referred her to an OT, because she is having a horrible time with handwriting. Her teacher and I both agree it is not lack of effort, she just cannot write neatly. He was concerned even before hearing of her sisters illness. I just wonder if some of this may be mito related. It seems odd that most of her problems start after 5 ho urs of school. On the weekends she is fine. She is never overly active, but plays. She spends a lot of time playing barbies and reading, all low energy activities. This is why I wonder if she could have a problem. I did make an appointment for tomorrow night with her pediatrician. If anyone has suggestions on some preliminary bloodwork, I would appreciate it. Thanks Again. Please contact mito-owner with any problems or questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2004 Report Share Posted January 14, 2004 Hi : Boy this sounds familiar. My oldest son, , has had trouble with handwriting. He does have some fine motor skills issues; but not enough to get OT in school. And he has headaches. And he complained of leg pains in third grade. We had his legs xrayed, nothing showed up. We took him to Leah's ped neurologist because of the headaches. He did have an MRI, CAT Scan, and blood workup done because of the issues with Leah. But nothing showed up. Our neuro feels it is migraines and we treat with Motrin at school when he gets a headache. He is allowed to go down to the nurses office takes the motrin and lays down for about 20 minutes and goes back to class. I truly believe the headaches are caused from stress; even though may not feel like it. Even though your daughter says everything is fine at school there could be more stress on her than she realizes. And may be she doesn't really like what is going on in gym. And could this have all come on after you are now dealing more with Gracie's issues? I know was having big time problems at home after Leah was born (and we were only dealing with cleft palate at that time) and he was complaining, crying, etc. I thought it was kindergarten even though he was only going half days. It finally came out one night after talking about different things that he shouted at us-It's Leah!! So we took a step back and thought now we need to deal with this. In third grade we did have see a counselor to talk about a lot of stuff and now we know about pushing his feelings way down and then he will let them out over some thing so small. Yes, I too worried that this could be the "soft" signs of mito coming on. But now I'm not trying to worry about his headaches and dealing with his other issues. We see an OT specialist during our summer vacation. And that has helped alot. I believe we get worried when we see these signs that could be mito and they could be other issues with our children. A lot of children get headaches, leg pains because of growing issues; but we take it a step farther and say....could it be? Which is ok. We need to stay on top of these things with our kids. So what I'm saying is talk to your doctor about what is going on. That is the first step we did. It could be related and it could be school and your daughter doesn't know how to communicate what is really going on in her mind. And keep a journal of when she gets these headaches and may be have the teacher at school do that too so you can pinpoint what is happening during the day. Is it before she eats, could it be low blood sugar? And don't make a big deal about low energy activities. Each child is different there, too. My older son, , loves to play with little things, computer and be by himself some days while his brother, , loves to play with other kids and active games if it is his choice. My husband and I say they are night and day our two boys. Preliminary bloodwork would be I believe lactic acid and pyruvate. Let me know how it goes and if you have any questions of how things are with now, you can email me via the group or privately. It just sounds so much like what we were going through since Kindergarten with and still are dealing with things with him and he is 11 years old. Good luck . Nerenhausen mom to Leah albregra@... wrote: Hello all! As most of you know, my daughter Grace is affected with a nonspecific mito. Up until lately, I felt so lucky that I had three other "healthy children." The oldest of my birth children, (6), has started having some strange problems. I do not know if it can be linked to mito or not. This is why I came to you, the experts. First of all she had some behavior problems in Kindergarten, but we switched her from full day to half day and life was fine. She is now in first grade, and her behavior is great. We get no bad reports from her teacher, until today. I got a phone call from her gym teacher. She tells me refuses to participate, telling her all the time she does not feel well. Her classroom teacher has told me that she does complain of headaches a lot, but it is not a problem in his class. Her gym class is late in the day, 2:30. When she gets home she is usually pretty irritable, until I give her a snack to hold her off until dinner. After dinner she is fine. Then when it comes to nighttime she has a ton of headaches. She really seems like she is in a lot of pain. They get so bad sometimes it will put her in tears. She will almost always be in bed with them. I do not think it is her eyes, she wears glasses and just got new ones. I hoped the new glasses would help, but they have not changed the situation at all. Also she gets leg spasms a lot. I have seen them and her legs just shake uncontrollably. She says it causes pain when this happens. Oh yeah and back to school. Her teacher also has referred her to an OT, because she is having a horrible time with handwriting. Her teacher and I both agree it is not lack of effort, she just cannot write neatly. He was concerned even before hearing of her sisters illness. I just wonder if some of this may be mito related. It seems odd that most of her problems start after 5 ho urs of school. On the weekends she is fine. She is never overly active, but plays. She spends a lot of time playing barbies and reading, all low energy activities. This is why I wonder if she could have a problem. I did make an appointment for tomorrow night with her pediatrician. If anyone has suggestions on some preliminary bloodwork, I would appreciate it. Thanks Again. Please contact mito-owner with any problems or questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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