- Joined
- May 27, 2017
- Messages
- 4
Hello everyone, I'm new to the forum so I'd like to introduce my story:
I'm a 40 year old male. I was first diagnosed with Crohn's disease at the age of 26 in 2003. Since then I've had 4 colonoscopies. Each scope, including the latest from last year, has shown scattered shallow erosions only in the terminal ileum and an otherwise healthy colon (though they did find diverticulosis). Luckily I've never needed any surgeries. One scope was so mild (this was after a run of Entocort) that my doctor said she thought it was unlikely that my irritable bowel symptoms -- average 5 loose stools per day and sometimes with urgency - could be attributed to the Crohn's.
Whether my Crohn's or irritable bowel is causing my loose stools and urgency is an open question. Irritable bowel, but not Crohn's, seems to run in my family, as both my father and sister have struggled with it. I have occasional cramps and urgency, and the 5 loose stools a day I understand is more than average (normal people have 1-2??). I get the BM usually shortly after a meal. It usually doesn't wake me up at night. I've also been lucky enough where what I eat doesn't seem to affect my condition, or at least I haven't noticed a correlation yet. I like to eat a lot of spicy foods.
I have been sick for a long time, but if you asked me to describe the worse symptoms, they wouldn't even be my GI issues. Going back to being a teenager, I've struggled with a whole syndrome of issues that vary in duration and intensity, going into remission and coming back later. During periods of remission in my life, I'm almost normal, with little health quirks here or there that are manageable. But during a flare, often not just one symptom but a cluster of symptoms will come back. In my most recent one, I have felt nauseous, with back pain and fatigue and cramping, all together. When I feel like this, it can be difficult to just get through the day.
One of my worse symptoms over the years which comes and goes has been a chest tightness. It feels like someone is grabbing me and squeezing me, the pressure is actually not in my abdomen but higher, where the two ribcages connect. It can be hard to get in a good breath, and it is usually accompanied by fatigue and irritability, and often back pain. I've had the workup of heart related issues (I also had palpitations so got that checked out), so I doubt it's related to the heart (though they did find a left bundle branch block). Again it will come and go mysteriously but it's quite uncomfortable, and it seems to get worse as the day goes on.
Other symptoms that I deal with include fatigue unalleviated by rest, back pain - sometimes intense - various joint pains (especially my wrists), eye pain and floaters (I had the eyes checked out but they were fine, but was diagnosed with irritation/inflammation of the eyelid and given steroid drops), low-grade chronic bronchitis (I have a steroid inhaler), hemorrhoids/anal fissures which I treat with hydrocortisone suppositories, nausea, and headaches. Sometimes I have just a general feeling of malaise and irritability accompanied by a light-headed feeling or "brain fog" and difficulty concentrating. I've had these symptoms going back to being a teenager, 6-8 years before I was diagnosed with Crohn's. They were the first presenting symptoms for me.
In terms of treating the Crohn's, I have been on Pentasa for the last 12 years, and on a few occasions, Entocort. I don't really notice much difference whether I take these drugs or not, in terms of my extra intestinal symptoms and even my bowel movements. Of course, you don't know how bad things would have been if you didn't take them. I stopped the Pentasa once and was fine for a few months, but then I had a weird episode of acute pain that might have been diverticulitis, I took antibiotics and it went away, but I went back on the Pentasa after that "just in case". Like others, I have read about the trials that have shown that Pentasa has little or maybe no efficacy for Crohn's and I wonder if it's really doing anything. At the very least it's definitely not helping with my chest pains or fatigue.
Over the years my medical syndrome has remained a mystery, and I continue to wonder how much can be explained by the Crohn's. Do I have an auto-immune disorder of which Crohn's is the symptom, or is Crohn's causing all thee other problems too? In the literature that I've read online, it seems many of my symptoms - fatigue, back pain, joint pain - can be caused by Crohn's. However, I've had a hard time getting my GI docs excited about it. For one thing they are used to treating the gut and are primarily concerned about that - and I appear to have a mild case of Crohn's. Another thing is that when they run the blood tests, my CRP markers (to check for inflammation) are always normal, showing no abnormal inflammation (although I've heard that's not always reliable?). My last GI doc told me that he doubts the other symptoms are related and I should check with my primary care doc -- why? Because if they were caused by crohn's, he says that I would have worse crohn's - my scope results would be worse, and inflammation markers would show a lot more activity. I've also been to 2 different rheumatologists and they've done a variety of blood work and found nothing unusual from the rheumatology perspective.
Because the Pentasa alone hasn't yielded a totally clean scope (they still see some active signs of Crohn's), several GI docs have floated the idea of stepping up and going on 6MP or Imuran, or even trying something like Humira with the new "top down approach" that some docs are trying these days. I have to be honest these drugs scare me. I don't like the idea of taking an expensive, heavy duty drug that requires injections, frequent blood monitoring, leaving myself more open to infections, and raising my chances of lymphoma or pancreatitis. However I'm sort of at my wits end, feeling crummy day after day, and at a point where I might want to try it, not so much for the Crohn's, but to see if it would help with all these other cluster of symptoms that I get from my mysterious syndrome.
I'm wondering if others in this forum have complained more about fatigue, back pain, chest tightness, light headedness, eye pain, joint pains, nausea, etc, than the bowel symptoms, and if they've have luck with helping these things by taking stronger Crohn's medications such as Humira or 6-MP? Or do you think it's likely that these things are unrelated and would not be helped by these medications? I suppose I could try and see, unfortunately it seems it's not that easy to "just try" a pill or 2, Humira requires 4 injections that last a month, and if you go off of it you might develop anti-bodies, and 6-MP could take 3 months to start working.
Any advice is much appreciated!
Thanks and hang in there everyone
-- sickincali
P.S. I also have anxiety and take klonopin for that as needed. It can make my condition worse but I don't believe it is the cause.
I'm a 40 year old male. I was first diagnosed with Crohn's disease at the age of 26 in 2003. Since then I've had 4 colonoscopies. Each scope, including the latest from last year, has shown scattered shallow erosions only in the terminal ileum and an otherwise healthy colon (though they did find diverticulosis). Luckily I've never needed any surgeries. One scope was so mild (this was after a run of Entocort) that my doctor said she thought it was unlikely that my irritable bowel symptoms -- average 5 loose stools per day and sometimes with urgency - could be attributed to the Crohn's.
Whether my Crohn's or irritable bowel is causing my loose stools and urgency is an open question. Irritable bowel, but not Crohn's, seems to run in my family, as both my father and sister have struggled with it. I have occasional cramps and urgency, and the 5 loose stools a day I understand is more than average (normal people have 1-2??). I get the BM usually shortly after a meal. It usually doesn't wake me up at night. I've also been lucky enough where what I eat doesn't seem to affect my condition, or at least I haven't noticed a correlation yet. I like to eat a lot of spicy foods.
I have been sick for a long time, but if you asked me to describe the worse symptoms, they wouldn't even be my GI issues. Going back to being a teenager, I've struggled with a whole syndrome of issues that vary in duration and intensity, going into remission and coming back later. During periods of remission in my life, I'm almost normal, with little health quirks here or there that are manageable. But during a flare, often not just one symptom but a cluster of symptoms will come back. In my most recent one, I have felt nauseous, with back pain and fatigue and cramping, all together. When I feel like this, it can be difficult to just get through the day.
One of my worse symptoms over the years which comes and goes has been a chest tightness. It feels like someone is grabbing me and squeezing me, the pressure is actually not in my abdomen but higher, where the two ribcages connect. It can be hard to get in a good breath, and it is usually accompanied by fatigue and irritability, and often back pain. I've had the workup of heart related issues (I also had palpitations so got that checked out), so I doubt it's related to the heart (though they did find a left bundle branch block). Again it will come and go mysteriously but it's quite uncomfortable, and it seems to get worse as the day goes on.
Other symptoms that I deal with include fatigue unalleviated by rest, back pain - sometimes intense - various joint pains (especially my wrists), eye pain and floaters (I had the eyes checked out but they were fine, but was diagnosed with irritation/inflammation of the eyelid and given steroid drops), low-grade chronic bronchitis (I have a steroid inhaler), hemorrhoids/anal fissures which I treat with hydrocortisone suppositories, nausea, and headaches. Sometimes I have just a general feeling of malaise and irritability accompanied by a light-headed feeling or "brain fog" and difficulty concentrating. I've had these symptoms going back to being a teenager, 6-8 years before I was diagnosed with Crohn's. They were the first presenting symptoms for me.
In terms of treating the Crohn's, I have been on Pentasa for the last 12 years, and on a few occasions, Entocort. I don't really notice much difference whether I take these drugs or not, in terms of my extra intestinal symptoms and even my bowel movements. Of course, you don't know how bad things would have been if you didn't take them. I stopped the Pentasa once and was fine for a few months, but then I had a weird episode of acute pain that might have been diverticulitis, I took antibiotics and it went away, but I went back on the Pentasa after that "just in case". Like others, I have read about the trials that have shown that Pentasa has little or maybe no efficacy for Crohn's and I wonder if it's really doing anything. At the very least it's definitely not helping with my chest pains or fatigue.
Over the years my medical syndrome has remained a mystery, and I continue to wonder how much can be explained by the Crohn's. Do I have an auto-immune disorder of which Crohn's is the symptom, or is Crohn's causing all thee other problems too? In the literature that I've read online, it seems many of my symptoms - fatigue, back pain, joint pain - can be caused by Crohn's. However, I've had a hard time getting my GI docs excited about it. For one thing they are used to treating the gut and are primarily concerned about that - and I appear to have a mild case of Crohn's. Another thing is that when they run the blood tests, my CRP markers (to check for inflammation) are always normal, showing no abnormal inflammation (although I've heard that's not always reliable?). My last GI doc told me that he doubts the other symptoms are related and I should check with my primary care doc -- why? Because if they were caused by crohn's, he says that I would have worse crohn's - my scope results would be worse, and inflammation markers would show a lot more activity. I've also been to 2 different rheumatologists and they've done a variety of blood work and found nothing unusual from the rheumatology perspective.
Because the Pentasa alone hasn't yielded a totally clean scope (they still see some active signs of Crohn's), several GI docs have floated the idea of stepping up and going on 6MP or Imuran, or even trying something like Humira with the new "top down approach" that some docs are trying these days. I have to be honest these drugs scare me. I don't like the idea of taking an expensive, heavy duty drug that requires injections, frequent blood monitoring, leaving myself more open to infections, and raising my chances of lymphoma or pancreatitis. However I'm sort of at my wits end, feeling crummy day after day, and at a point where I might want to try it, not so much for the Crohn's, but to see if it would help with all these other cluster of symptoms that I get from my mysterious syndrome.
I'm wondering if others in this forum have complained more about fatigue, back pain, chest tightness, light headedness, eye pain, joint pains, nausea, etc, than the bowel symptoms, and if they've have luck with helping these things by taking stronger Crohn's medications such as Humira or 6-MP? Or do you think it's likely that these things are unrelated and would not be helped by these medications? I suppose I could try and see, unfortunately it seems it's not that easy to "just try" a pill or 2, Humira requires 4 injections that last a month, and if you go off of it you might develop anti-bodies, and 6-MP could take 3 months to start working.
Any advice is much appreciated!
Thanks and hang in there everyone
-- sickincali
P.S. I also have anxiety and take klonopin for that as needed. It can make my condition worse but I don't believe it is the cause.