- Joined
- Sep 4, 2018
- Messages
- 1
Hi,
By some stroke of luck, I was able to convince my GP to put me in for a flexible sigmoidoscopy less than a month after the start of my symptoms. As a result, we found a tiny little patch of Crohn's ulcers that were barely there in the sigmoid and descending colon (they look just like mouth ulcers), and a later MRI scan showed the disease was absent in the small intestine. My GI put me on Pentasa (2 packets a day).
What I was wondering is--since I seem to have caught this disease so early and in a stage where it's barely even there at all, have I put myself in the perfect position to stop it from getting any worse? In that vein, other than continuing to take the Pentasa prescription, what is there that I can do on my end to keep this under control--and could I actually manage to stay mild indefinitely? I've seen and heard how bad it can get and I don't want to end up suffering needlessly knowing I could have done something early.
Thank you for your help.
By some stroke of luck, I was able to convince my GP to put me in for a flexible sigmoidoscopy less than a month after the start of my symptoms. As a result, we found a tiny little patch of Crohn's ulcers that were barely there in the sigmoid and descending colon (they look just like mouth ulcers), and a later MRI scan showed the disease was absent in the small intestine. My GI put me on Pentasa (2 packets a day).
What I was wondering is--since I seem to have caught this disease so early and in a stage where it's barely even there at all, have I put myself in the perfect position to stop it from getting any worse? In that vein, other than continuing to take the Pentasa prescription, what is there that I can do on my end to keep this under control--and could I actually manage to stay mild indefinitely? I've seen and heard how bad it can get and I don't want to end up suffering needlessly knowing I could have done something early.
Thank you for your help.