Diagnosis
I arrived on time and was eventually ushered into a room to wait. He's usually on time, even came in to grab something and said he'd just be "a minute" but was gone for another 10 or 15 minutes. His hurriedness made me think that there was uncomfortable news to come.
Finally it was my turn.
And it was a mixed bag.
The polyp was fine, nothing abnormal there. Whew. Thank god. And then the other shoe dropped.
"We have the answer to your problem."
Ok. Before the colonoscopy I did stool samples (3 days long) that tested me for every bacterial, parasite, or worm on the planet and they were all negative. I was also tested for celiac disease (blood test). Also negative. So he had taken biopsies during the colonoscopy and this actually told him what the problem was. My understanding was that the only real options were dismal:
cancer
celiac disease (spruae)
chron's disease
So I assumed that it was one of these. My heart sank.
"Lymphocytic Colitis. You should write this down."
He continued to explain that lymphocytic colitics is a somewhat rare condition (affects 1 in 100,000 to 19.6 in 100,000 people depending on what data you believe). It's characterized by lymphocytes infiltrating the colon in response to "something." No one seems to know what really causes it. Sometimes it's NSAIDs that cause it, bacteria or bacterial toxins, viruses, or a purely immune fuckup.
In my case it could be any of these.
NSAIDs? I was on Rx strength for two weeks before this started (surgeon prescribed them after my surgery on 6/30).
Bacteria or bacterial toxins? I had sushi the day before it started out in Brooklyn. I was also eating Prilosec, which drops the pH of the stomach (which, in turn, lets some forms of bacteria run rampant).
Immune conditions? Check. I have psoriasis, elevated natural killer cells. My mom is HLA-B27 positive (tissue type known for immune screw ups) - I'm not but I can't help but wonder if there is a relation here.
I've spent the better part of the night reading. It seems it can go away over time with proper medication, but can return randomly through life. Usually woman over 50 get this. Here I am at 45 with it though, and I suspect that this might be my 2nd bout with this in my life (the first being in 2004 or 2005).
So - tomorrow I see Dr. Check - IVF doctor and Reproductive Immunologist extraordinaire. I hope that he can shed a bit of light on whether I can cycle this month or not. If this is truly immune related, I would be crazy to put embryos into me right now.
I'll figure out what the next steps are tomorrow. In the meantime, there's a GI Medical Article that said that 75% of LC patients that took 8 pills of pepto bismol a day for 8 weeks were cured and stayed stable. The other 25%? They didn't do too bad either.
Clearly I'll be hitting up costco tomorrow to buy industrial sized packages of pepto bismol tablets.
And yet one more possible roadblock to my doing my next IVF cycle.
Sigh.
Labels: GI Problems, LC, Lymphocytic Colitis
Comments on "Diagnosis"
BUT! You do not have Chron's! Or cancer! Or celiac disease! This is all good. And perhaps now that there is a diagnosis you will be able to fight - even if you have to take PB for two months. Crazy.Best of luck as always hon.
I'm with musicmakermomma. At least you don't have cancer!
I wonder if going on a no gluten, no sugar diet would help.
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I'm with the other ladies: not cancer = very, very good. I'm glad. I'm glad especially given the size of the polyp. But it's a bummer, especially the possibility of something autoimmune. There's so much damned creep to that, it drives me crazy.
Was there any talk of autoimmune meds/anti-inflammatories? Glad that it might be as straightforward as Pepto Bismol! (Sometimes the oldies really are the goodies).
Hoping this is only a minor bump and won't affect your cycle.
Ladies,
You're all right. I am so grateful that it wasn't cancer. A very good friend of mine died 7 years ago from colon cancer and this really affected me.
Jem: Yes, I am going to try going on an anti-inflammatory diet to see if will help. I've been reading oodles online about this condition and it seems that there some folks that get it that have subclinical wheat issues (actual medical studies, not just naturopath hunches). So I'm taking it safe.
I saw Dr. Check today - he thinks that this might all tie into my other immune issues...scary crap.
All I know is that I am going to beat this damned thing.
Information is power and thank goodness it is beatable. And you will do it, Linda - I know you will. Wow - Dr. Check...I have heard a lot about him from the high FSH board...I am starting to think most IF is due to autoimmune issues. I really hope you can get to the bottom of this super soon and get your next IVF show on the road. You clearly have the best doctors and are incredibly resourceful so that is going to serve you very well. Thinking of you lots and sending you anti-autoimmune vibes!
Love,
Maddy