Guest guest Posted April 27, 2003 Report Share Posted April 27, 2003 In a message dated 4/27/03 7:43:17 PM Eastern Daylight Time, hhessgriffeth@... writes: > Thanks for listening to my complaints and confusion, if I can ever > Hi Heidi, My goodness, what a hose job you are having. I can only suggest sorting it all out and just trying to deal with one thing at a time. What you have been and are going through would be totally overwhelming. Please try to take it easy and make it easy and don't let the mountain you are climbing get the best of you. Pull out all you old tricks to deal with this situation and situations that are forced upon you. I wish I could offer more. Best Wishes, Poncho - GA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 27, 2003 Report Share Posted April 27, 2003 Hi y'all, I had promised to get back with the news about my recent GI visit, I'll try to explain it without getting everyone too confused. It was my understanding that the purpose of this visit was to review the check-up ultrasound I had done two weeks ago to see if my psueodocysts had grown or stablized. Once that was established, a plan of action of what to do about them was supposed to be proposed. Two weeks ago I had given all my GI records, lab work, and radiology reports to date to this doctor to review. The ultrasound, which was done at his hospital, which is a different one than I've been using, was done, but the report failed to detail precise measurements, just that one pseudocyst was approximately 6 cm. and the other 3 cm. I saw the technician measuring the full diameter (several different measurements) of each cyst, so I don't know why the report wasn't more detailed. My previous CT-scan 4 weeks earlier showed them as 6 x 5 and 3x 5 cm., and was a much more detailed report. So this was not conclusive of any changes. When I went to this second appointment, I also took all 200+ pages of my hospital records. While I was in the hospital they did every blood, urine and stool test imagineable, plus drug tests, chemical tests, bacterial tests, multiple chest x-rays, heart ryhym monitoring tests, cardiology reports, etc. You name it, it was done. Upon release, my internist did a full CBC workup and diabetes Ac1 test, and those records were given to the doctor the day of my appointment. The hospital records were a month old, and the internist's about two weeks old. I got irritated with the new doctor when he kept saying, " I don't see such and such a test, I'll order one " , and I had to keep pointing out that this one, or that one, or this one, had just been done.....just read the records! He seemed more inclined to order all new tests, taking days to weeks to accomplish, plus considerable expense insurance-wise, when all the information was there in front of him. My internist had just done a complete physical, yet he insisted on doing his own. When I questioned why he wanted to do another one, he said it was because he wanted to do it himself. Okay, I can see that, but I can't see spending hundreds or perhaps more dollars for all new tests on everything. He ordered a chest CT-scan and an MRI to be done this week, and wouldn't let me schedule them myself, as the other GI used to let me do. Insisted that his assistant schedule them. She called me back the next day with the times and days, and I had conflicts with other doctor's tests or appointments which had been made weeks ago. So she didn't like it when I told her that those dates were unsuitable for me. She said I've got your MRCP scheduled for Wednesday, and your Chest CT-scan scheduled Tuesday. I said " MRCP.....? I thought he wanted an MRI? " She said he'd changed his mind and changed the order to an MRCP. She said I had to do NPO for twelve hours prior to the MRCP, but the literature I've read after talking with her about the MRCP says you CAN have light foods and beverages before the exam. Who's right? It's scheduled for 1:30 p.m., and that's a long haul for me with my diabetes to go without food or drink! I'm prone to hypo and those are perfect conditions for a hypo to happen. Especially with being that time of day, theoretically I wouldn't be eating or drinking anything for 16 hours, unless I wake myself at 1:00 a.m. and eat something then. I didn't know this when she called, so I told her okay, I could do that, but I wasn't able to do the chest ct-scan on Tuesday, and that I WASN'T going to do it anyway. It wasn't necessary since I had three chest x-rays just done and all were perfectly fine, all the doctor needed to do was look at them in the records. My insurance won't pay for any more. Besides, they have no relevance with the pseudocyst problem. She didn't seem to like that remark. So then, at 6:00 pm on Friday, when I'm out, hospital registration calls and leaves a message to tell me that my MRI is scheduled for tomorrow (Monday). Can't do that one, I've got a conflicting mammogram and bone density test during that time scheduled by my internist four weeks ago. But wait a minute, an MRI? I thought he'd changed it to an MRCP on Wednesday...there's no reason to have both.....and of course it's after hours on Friday and no way to find what in the world is going on! So consequently I'm still confused as to what's going on, and I have doctor's appointments or procedures sheduled for four of the five weekdays this week. And as you know, just one procedure or appointment manages to take up practically the whole day....time to get there, time spent sitting in a waiting room, etc. So that means another week spent feeling like a guinea pig, totally involved in medical business....yuck! No chance to get any time enjoying our lovely weather! But it did seem like the GI was leaning toward trying a fine needle aspiration again, which is really what I'd like to try again, other than get under the knife. He made some notes in his dictaphone that sounded like he considered surgery as a last resort. So I'm hoping that the MRCP gives him a really clear picture of the ducts and pseudocysts and they look good enough for the aspiration to be the chosen procedure. Otherwise, I'm doing about the same. Still a lot of pseudocyst pain, no noticeable weight gain (109) even though I'm on a 1,800 calorie a day diet and probably sneaking another 500 in each day, and still having crazy up and down BG's, usually favoring the lows at nights and now during the days, too. I meet with the endocrinologist's CDE on Tuesday, maybe we'll get some of that straightened out. Thanks for listening to my complaints and confusion, if I can ever get it straightened out, I'll let you know. Hope everyone is doing well, the board's been sorta quiet the last few days, I hope that's a GOOD sign! With hope and prayers, Heidi Heidi H. Griffeth South Carolina Southeastern Representative PAI, Intl. Note: All advice or comments are personal opinion only, and should not be substituted for professional medical consultation Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2003 Report Share Posted April 29, 2003 Poncho, Thanks for your wise and comforting advice. As always, it's advice that can be easily done, with positive results. I'm dealing with each procedure and appointment on a day by day basis and not trying to let it all overwhelm me. Much less stress this way! I loved the reference to climbing a mountain.....it evoked memories of a lesson I learned from my brother, but had forgotten in the confusion. You said you wished you could offer more, but your comments have done more to help than you realize. My brother and I used to climb a lot when I was a senior in high school. It was his goal that summer to become a member of a very select mountain climbing club whose condition of membership was to trek all the highest peaks in the Northeast. I believe there were 46. If you thought of all these mountains as a whole, it would seem an impossible task to complete. But by separating them, taking them one by one, and planning careful strategy on how to accomplish each mountain's climb, he was able to climb them all and become a member of this club that meant so much to him. I went along on a few of these climbs that summer. Those days are some of my happiest memories of things we did together in our youth, provided some experiences that we've been able to laugh about all our adult lives, and provided him with his much wanted elite membership. So I'm going to apply that lesson in this case and just climb this mountain in nice, easily accomplished portions, day by day. Once I reach the top the view will be a hundred times better, since I'll still have the strength and breath to enjoy it! With hope and prayers, Heidi Heidi H. Griffeth South Carolina Southeastern Representative PAI, Intl. P.S......BTW, this brother is my oldest brother (I have two) and lives in Sweden. He's 56. He was just here to visit me, worried about my recent hospitalization and overall health. He's always looked out for me. He's a Vet, is an accomplished skydiver and teaches sky diving on weekends. Our school is having a big 100th anniversary party and reunion in 2005, which would be my 35th reunion, his 40th. He wants to teach me skydiving and have the two of us dive in for a reunion surprise.......what d'ya think? Note: All advice or comments are personal opinion only, and should not be substituted for professional medical consultation <<I can only suggest sorting it all out and just trying to deal with one thing at a time. What you have been and are going through would be totally overwhelming. Please try to take it easy and make it easy and don't let the mountain you are climbing get the best of you. Pull out all you old tricks to deal with this situation and situations that are forced upon you. I wish I could offer more. Best Wishes, Poncho - GA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
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.