I've had digestive issues off and on for years, but they were always relatively minor (diarrhea, stomach cramps, acid reflux, etc.) and I never paid them too much attention because I either thought they were connected to something else (and I'm sure sometimes they were) or I couldn't discern a pattern behind it. Then I started having increasing issues in my early 20s and they took out my gall bladder at 25. I got used to the idea that I couldn't eat fried food at all unless I wanted to spend hours in screaming agony, and that any fatty or overly-processed foods had to be eaten sparingly or I'd suffer for it. Reduced my nacho intake, changed the kind of dishes I ordered at my favorite restaurants, starting eating a lot of spinach (it's amazing on pizza, FYI)--didn't do like a complete over-haul of my diet or anything, just made some alterations that allowed me to function adequately without making a load of radical changes. A couple of times when I worried about a bladder infection, even though the symptoms weren't quite right, the tests came back negative. They looked for endometriosis, a disease all the women in my family apparently have, but the results were inconclusive. In 2011 my doctors ran a series of blood tests and told me I was remarkably healthy for an overweight woman, but that I had extremely high C-reactive protein levels that would indicate chronic inflammation, at levels higher than would be typical just by being an over weight light smoker, but then my health insurance ran out and we couldn't follow that particular rabbit down its hole.
Then 2 years ago I began a messy divorce that put me through 15 months of the highest stress I have ever experienced in my life. The anxiety caused 3 months solid of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, lack of appetite, and fainting spells (probably because of the lack of nutrition and large amounts of adrenaline in my system). Lost 55 pounds. Didn't have health insurance then but I got free counseling services through a local shelter, got my anxiety under control, and was able to get my life back together. My tummy troubles mostly backed off, and I figured they would completely diminish over time. Then a couple of months ago things started to get worse instead. Diarrhea attacks every other day. Extreme fatigue; by early afternoon I was brain-dead and falling asleep at my desk. I kept thinking I was having random allergic reactions that didn't seem to follow a consistent exposure pattern; just randomly I would have stomach cramps, back pains, skin irritation on my arms, chest, back, and/or neck, and felt feverish. It kept going for months and I was miserable. The final straw was during the worst flare-ups, it felt like I was being kicked in the back by a child wearing steel-toed boots, going to into labor, or having sharp stabbing pains in my right abdomen (lowish, but sort of near by navel). Went to the doctor because, huzzah, finally I have health insurance again, and they tested for kidney stones. Nothing on the urine analysis. Nothing on the blood screen but slightly elevated leukocyte count. Sent me in for a CT scan - no kidney stones, but it looked like colon-wall thickening would indicate I need a colonoscopy. Great. 30 years old and I need a colonoscopy. Last week I had it and the only thing they found was one benign polyp and even though I'm supposed to be super glad nothing's wrong with my large intestine and I don't have colon cancer (to which my response was, "Wait, that was an option?! No one told me that was a concern!"), I still have to go back in five years for another colonoscopy.
So now I still have irregular stools. Usually it's diarrhea if it's abnormal, but sometimes it's constipation. Now I still have abdominal and stomach cramps that are often accompanied by horrendous back pain and occasionally still the rash/hives itching that goes away in less than an hour. I wake up in the middle of the night sometimes weirdly flushed and sweating and spend half an hour to an hour in the bathroom, and most of the time I still feel like I have to go even when nothing more is going to happen at that particular point in time. My mom doesn't have any IBD, but her father had Crohn's and colon cancer, and her mother's father died of colon cancer. My mother, her father, her sister, and I have all had our gall bladders removed because of stones. I don't really know about my dad's medical history. I'm tired all the time and spend way too much time in the bathroom, and so far the doctors haven't told me anything helpful except to increase my fiber.
Is it possible to have some sort of GI problem that in no way leaves its mark on the large intestine?
Then 2 years ago I began a messy divorce that put me through 15 months of the highest stress I have ever experienced in my life. The anxiety caused 3 months solid of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, lack of appetite, and fainting spells (probably because of the lack of nutrition and large amounts of adrenaline in my system). Lost 55 pounds. Didn't have health insurance then but I got free counseling services through a local shelter, got my anxiety under control, and was able to get my life back together. My tummy troubles mostly backed off, and I figured they would completely diminish over time. Then a couple of months ago things started to get worse instead. Diarrhea attacks every other day. Extreme fatigue; by early afternoon I was brain-dead and falling asleep at my desk. I kept thinking I was having random allergic reactions that didn't seem to follow a consistent exposure pattern; just randomly I would have stomach cramps, back pains, skin irritation on my arms, chest, back, and/or neck, and felt feverish. It kept going for months and I was miserable. The final straw was during the worst flare-ups, it felt like I was being kicked in the back by a child wearing steel-toed boots, going to into labor, or having sharp stabbing pains in my right abdomen (lowish, but sort of near by navel). Went to the doctor because, huzzah, finally I have health insurance again, and they tested for kidney stones. Nothing on the urine analysis. Nothing on the blood screen but slightly elevated leukocyte count. Sent me in for a CT scan - no kidney stones, but it looked like colon-wall thickening would indicate I need a colonoscopy. Great. 30 years old and I need a colonoscopy. Last week I had it and the only thing they found was one benign polyp and even though I'm supposed to be super glad nothing's wrong with my large intestine and I don't have colon cancer (to which my response was, "Wait, that was an option?! No one told me that was a concern!"), I still have to go back in five years for another colonoscopy.
So now I still have irregular stools. Usually it's diarrhea if it's abnormal, but sometimes it's constipation. Now I still have abdominal and stomach cramps that are often accompanied by horrendous back pain and occasionally still the rash/hives itching that goes away in less than an hour. I wake up in the middle of the night sometimes weirdly flushed and sweating and spend half an hour to an hour in the bathroom, and most of the time I still feel like I have to go even when nothing more is going to happen at that particular point in time. My mom doesn't have any IBD, but her father had Crohn's and colon cancer, and her mother's father died of colon cancer. My mother, her father, her sister, and I have all had our gall bladders removed because of stones. I don't really know about my dad's medical history. I'm tired all the time and spend way too much time in the bathroom, and so far the doctors haven't told me anything helpful except to increase my fiber.
Is it possible to have some sort of GI problem that in no way leaves its mark on the large intestine?