Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 I know what you mean about the docs saying its all " in your head. " As they say, been there, done that! Fourteen years to be exact. Even when I finally got pancreatitis I had no idea that the " pain from the sky " I had been getting for years had anything to do with it! Had they diagnosed the SOD sooner....as is probably in your case, the pancreatitis would not have happened. As far as treatment with SOD, this is what I have figured out in my case: You cannot give up! If you have one treatment and it doesn't last, go back. I know when I had my first stent, and then got sick again six months later, the doctors where I live tried to tell me there was nothing more that anybody could do in ton. They made me believe that they had talked to Dr. Cotton and he said there was no more he could do. Actually that is what they said. After I thought about it for awhile, I sent him a fax and low and behold he called me within 30 minutes and told me to get back down there he would help me. I will never forget that visit because he looked me straight in the eye and said that as long as I wanted to keep trying, he would keep trying! Where I live, the medical community is very " political " and they dont' give a rats butt about the patients. Long story short, after four times, I finally got enough relief that I haven't had to go back since October of 2000! Almost three years. I have very few attacks of SOD anymore and about one major pancreatiits attack a year as opposed to the 47 times I was in the hospital in three years! When they do the manometry tests, sometimes high pressures will show up in one place and not the other. They have to treat what they can see. Its nothing to guess at. Each time I went back, pressures were high in another spot so they would fix that spot. Again, nothing to mess with but in the hands of an expert is very safe. Laurie I hope you get relief from your SOD and the pancreatitis attacks stop. Don't give up! KAye Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2003 Report Share Posted July 30, 2003 Hi Kaye, Don't know how I missed this yesterday but it was nice to find a new note today. I finally have time to devote to investigating this whole CP thing more fully and I appreciate hearing about your experiences. Is it appropriate to give you a more detailed account of my history with this? I do not mean a life story but a more summarized list that may trigger something relevant in your mind. I ask this because I am fully aware that I may not be diagnosed with SOD or CP and do not want to give the impression that I can offer advice to those that are known to have it. Truth to tell, I am getting a little anxious after reading some of the members stories about their ERCPs. I understood that this is risky but had figured that it was in the same order as any surgical procedure risK ( " Sure, appendectomy can result in severe complications or death but for the most part, this doesn't happen " kinda thing). And of course, there is always that little voice in the back of my head that asks if it is not overkill for something that is " all in my head " . Yes, I am convinced that it isn't but there is still a part of me that wishes / thinks that it is as I have heard it so often these past three years from doctors that I respect (even the ones that I work with) and I am not a sick person, had no need for doctors prior to my emergencies surgeries and have no desire to establish a " relationship " with one. That is why I am a little bummed about your encouragement to keep trying. I understand what you mean and I agree with you intellectually but do not want to accept that this may be in my future. I do not want to be " a patient " . And I have read some published research that questions the validity of SOD as a pathological process (there is some controversy over whether the sphincter truly dysfunctions and if so, is it the cause of the pain). And SO manometry does not seem to be universally accepted as a diagnostic procedure and on top of that, sphincterotomy may actually cause the symptoms that it is trying to cure and possibly result is CP (darned if you do, darned if you don't type of thing). But my husband is sick of me as I am so I feel compelled to at least try to do something so I can establish the fact that I really do want to get better (well, not me personally, just sick of me being sick). We almost ended up at a hospital during our vacation (in North Dakota where our insurance wouldn't have covered me) and if that happened, I know our relationship would have been strained. My second surgery occured during our annual vacation 3 years ago and it ended up causing a lot of unresolved resentment that I learned about a year later when he was one foot out of the door (and of course, there is more to the story - so don't blame him completely). So I am very determined to make it through this procedure with as little disruption to our lives as possible. A two week hospital stay for pancreatitis would be a nightmare! As would doing it over and over again. Ugh..... but I will not cross those bridges until I have to. But thanks for the heads-up and the encouragment. Laurie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2003 Report Share Posted July 31, 2003 Good morning, Laurie! I hope I didn't scare you away from having an ERCP because of the " flukey " thing that happened to my husband. This (nercrotizing pancreatitis) happens. There are odds ... but think of it as my husband was in this 'odd' category making you have the better odds of having an uneventful ERCP!!! If you can, talk honestly and openly with your doctor who will be performing the ERCP. There were times in the hospital where procedures were scheduled to be done, and my husband and I flat out refused anything until we had consultations with those who would perform these procedures. Yeah ... the doctor termed Barry as a " type A " personality ... we always had questions written on a dry- erase board in the hospital for the doctor EVERY day ... Barry even had the nurses help rearrange the hospital furniture so he could better move around with his IV pole! Eventually, the doctor ended up enjoying us ... he even told us he'd save Barry's daily visit for last because he knew he'd be bombarded with questions. To this day, this doctor calls us at home to check up on Barry's condition. Write your questions and hesitations down on paper (otherwise you forget to ask) .... let the doctor know you've been researching ... seems the more knowledgeable you are on the subject, the more the doctors don't try to 'take over' and keep you involved. (Don't let them force an object too large into your pancreatic ducts ... that might have been what caused Barry's condition. Don't let them put the scope too far down and pull up fecal material ... could create infection .... etc. Mention items so they know you know!!!) Hang in there ... don't fret ... and all will turn out well! Warmly, Beth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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