Scipio, if you don't mind saying, how did you go so long without being diagnosed? Did they misdiagnose it as something else?
The author of A Wrinkle in Time, Madeline L'Engle was diagnosed with Crohn's at age 60. She's the only other person I know of who was diagnosed so late in life.
Well actually I am 58 and not 60 but I was diagnosed with Crohn's 3 months ago after a colonoscopy when they found a stricture and the typical Crohn's lesions in my terminal ileum. I had then my first calprotectin test and it was around 500 and last week I just had my second Remicade infusion. This diagnosis was a shock to me since I always had funny things happening with my tummy since I was a kid....I was diagnosed with ...piloric stenosis??.....chronic duodenitis?? IBS, bacterial overgrowth, etc etc etc....but well that was in the sixties....its incredible that I was not diagnosed after peritonitis caused by an abscess (due to diverticulitis???) colostomy, ileostomy, a lot of CT's and even that special MRI .....when I had blockages they told me it was because those adhesions.....and that there was nothing to do since if I had surgery for the adhesions that will only create more adhesions!!!.......
I don't know why they never did a calprotectin test!!!,.... its incredible that after so many colonoscopies they never went a little further and decided to explore the terminal ileum. The only thing that worked for me during all these years was prednisone that I had to get somehow because the Drs told me that I had IBS and that prednisone was not good for that.....no wonder that prednisone worked for me....because I had Crohns.!!!
Once in the nineties after several bouts of indigestion when I was 30 a Dr told me that he suspected I may have UC proctitis or Crohns because some inflammation that I had in the colon looked a little like UC but at the same time a little like Crohns, that he really could not tell, since the biopsy came back negative.....he never diagnosed it but he even went ahead and put me anyway on Asacol, later Sulfasalasine, and later Pentasa for a couple of years.....and they all did nothing for me, if I had a lot of stress the only thing that worked for me was the Prednisone......I dont think they had that calprotectin test or even those biologics in the nineties ....looking back now I suspect I had this thing since I was a kid since a GI Dr was always treating me and doing tests....but that was a long time ago in the sixties!!!
So I assume I had bad luck with my diagnosis since I was officially diagnosed ......25 years later!!!.... by a brand new young GI that went ahead and looked into the terminal ileum even after a MRI test said that everything was OK....well its never too late and this Dr put me on Remicade and Budesonide... at least I am 58 and not 60 when I was diagnosed......LOL!!!...hopefully if the inflammation values go down he will try to dilate the stricture with a balloon the sooner the better!!!
They say that Crohn's disease its a difficult disease to diagnose sometimes, but I think in my case it just took too long. Based on my experience I assume that the actual numbers of Crohn's disease in the US are much, much higher than the current estimates of less than a million. There are probably a lot of Crohn's cases that go un-diagnosed for a long time....hopefully that will change if that calprotectin test becomes more widely known and prescribed by the Dr.
And of course about the Covid.....I already had Covid 4 months ago just a month before my diagnosis, luckily no fever, no breathing problems, etc etc just VERY tired and later no smell. They told me not to have the vaccine right away since I had a lot of antibodies but I was thinking it was time now to get the shot .
Since I am now in Remicade I am a little bit worried to get it since I heard that if you had Covid before sometimes you get a much stronger reaction to the shot, dunno with Remicade being an immune modulator probably it will be ok.....I have my Remicade follow up appointment with the Dr next week so I am gonna ask him if its safe to get the shot.