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Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 732
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 732
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I have similar symptoms and I clearly have autonomic issues. It's a tightness or along the lines that you put it. Best of luck resolving it. I'm working on my gut health quite actively, and hope to resolve it, especially since I suspect that it's at the root of my SFN (even if partially).
Quote:
Originally Posted by v5118lKftfk
Hello,
I'm wondering if some of the more seasoned pners could take a guess / offer thoughts on what the likelihood that my recent strange digestion problems are linked to my particular type of pn.
I developed mild-moderate pn from chemotherapy two years ago. I couldn't stand for more than an hour (i.e. couldn't do long shopping standing looking at products) or walk more than a couple of hours (i.e. couldn't do shopping at a mall), numbness, tingling, zaps, cramps, sensitivity to cold.
Just in recent months, I have been thinking my pn might be fading away (hurrah!!! - but let's reserve judgement). I noticed I could start standing / walking longer, less cramps, zaps, etc.
However two months ago I developed strange pains in my upper abdomen which I seem to live with mild-to more strongly constantly, lessening sometimes but never fully going away. I often feel a sharpish "pulling like" pain in the center just below the ribs where they tell me my stomach is and I feel a general pressure below my diaphragm where perhaps my upper colon is. However I have no constipation, diahhrea, everything empties normally, no gas, no heartburn up my esophagus.
I don't believe the doctors know what is going on. First, they said it was gastritis but a gastroscopy and stool and blood lab results showed nothing and no viruses. They've also checked my heart with an EKG, liver, pancreas, kidneys, abdomen sonogram and had me completely empty my bowels and use Pronton Pump Inhibitors, and anti-constipation stuff that gets stuff moving. Then they were afraid my ovarian cancer was back but a CT PET showed nothing (hurrah!). They've held off on the colonoscopy saying I just had one two years ago for my cancer (dubious logic - I'll probably press on this one). Now they are saying perhaps my colon is sluggish, not pushing food out quickly and so food is fermenting and building up gas which is causing pressure.
They want me to drink mild anti-constipation powder for the next 6 months to year, they say I need this continual treatment to get my colon moving. I am very suspicious of doing this longterm. I have a bias that classical western school medicine is simply pro-pills and actually gets very little training in nutrition or how to work with your digestion naturally to keep it healthy ... however I am finding it hard to find a gastrologist specialist who is integrative/holistic/sees the big picture.
Since my pn is chemo based, relatively mild and seems to be getting better, and the heaviest pn onset was 2 years ago with my first chemo infusion and fading since then, I have been discounting the abdomen problems as pn-related. I am 51, post menopause with ovary removal, so I thought perhaps it's just aging.
However, on the other hand, I've always had great digestion, so this sudden onset is very strange. Also I am a real foodie, so my great healthy eating doesn't seem to be paying off. Also the fact that it's not going away and all the standard things don't seem to be helping is suspicious.
Any thoughts on how likely this is pn related?
Any advice on what to do next? What to ask for or push for?
The doctors here are pathetic. They don't really listen to my symptoms, just give a quick five minutes where they simply tell me pills to try. I have to twist their arm just to ask "what should I be eating / not eating". I don't think they are rigorous in figuring out what this really is, I have to push for everything.
Thanks for any thoughts.
Natalie
P.S. I can't resist .... Just to add a weird story of why I think some of these doctors are pathetic ..... When I had my gastroscopy, they put me under. When I woke up from being under, I found myself dressed, with shoes on, my handbag on the floor next to me, sitting on a make-shift shelf, propped up / leaning against a concrete wall so I wouldn't fall over, in a busy open hallway with people walking back and forth. Waking out of anesthesia this way was very disorientating and it took me a minute to figure out where I was, where they had put me, what they had done with me. They didn't even give me enough time to let me wake up from anesthesia naturally in my bed but instead got me to put on my shoes, etc and propped me against a wall so they could have the bed!! This freaked me out. I complained to the nurse that this is a very unprofessional way to handle patients that put their trust in them to be very vulnerable under anesthesia. She said "well you didn't complain to us when we moved you"(!) I said that if you have to lean me up against a concrete wall to finish sleeping from anesthesia and I am not awake enough to sit upright in a lobby chair under my own power, then I am not capable enough to look out for myself, give you clear feedback or take care of myself and my belongings in a busy hallway among strangers. They still didn't get it. It really freaked me out how they didn't take care of me while still under!
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