My sister and I were diagnosed the same year in 1991. She's 17 months older than me. I was 9 and she was 11. I'll tag her to this thread as well in case she wants to weigh in. tsstarry
We were seeing the same GI and I believe for a while we were on the same medications. I started out with Azulfidine yet I'm not sure if she took that as well because I eventually started passing a lot of blood in my urine from it so I was switched to Asacol and later 6MP/Mercaptopurine which I know my sister also took (the 6MP that is). We also both took Prednisone at a high dose for far too long and both had extreme water retention that resulted in stretchmarks on our bodies. I'm not sure if that's our parent's fault or our GI's fault but we did live about 4 hours away from our GI so this is something I believe our parents should have reported sooner before it got as bad as it did. At some point you have to accept that it's not working and move on to something else but since we were minors, our health care wasn't really in our hands.
I'm not entirely sure what all went on in my sister's mind during that time but it may have affected her view on doctors and medication in general. For us it sort of seemed that the extreme side effects from the high dose of Prednisone at the time wasn't worth what the Crohn's was doing. I didn't know what all Crohn's was capable of until I got much worse and this is where my sister and I went a different path in terms of treatment and in my ability to know what treatment she was getting anymore. A lot of focus went towards me when my health declined and that's not good when you have two children with the same disease. Her health being neglected could have put her health in jeopardy as well.
While I was still on Prednisone they added Entocort which I was told was newly approved back then. Maybe it could have worked had I gotten it sooner but it was too late. By that time my disease had progressed so much that the medications weren't controlling the inflammation at all and I started having obstructions because of it. I remember one time we were all out getting pizza and I remember not feeling the best but I was managing until I felt extreme pain and a wave of nausea so I ran outside and vomited in front of the building. My mom immediately took me to the ER and that's when they discovered that I really needed surgery. I was pout on a liquid diet until my surgery date.
After my surgery I continued taking Asacol and 6MP to help keep my Crohn's in remission which I achieved after my resection. I was 17 at the time. I've been in remission since and have always taken medication following my resection.
So what happened to my sister during that time? I know that she had tried to go to college after graduating High School from a different High School than the one she was at originally. I don't recall why she changed schools but I believe it had to do with low grades and a disinterest in school which all could have been related to her health. I know I missed a lot of school and I'm sure that she did too. I'm not sure of the year but at some point my sister stopped receiving SSI (we both did and I still do) and no longer had any health coverage. Since she couldn't afford to see a doctor or afford medication or tests her health would wax and wane. She would often tell me that she was doing fine yet there were a couple times when she mentioned that she saw blood in her stool which is a clear sign of active disease. To this day she hasn't taken any medication for Crohn's and I think it's been at least 10 years if not longer.
Her last scope that she finally was able to do recently showed no signs of active disease meaning that she's in remission. However during and after her recent pregnancy she's had a lot of issues with her joints, feet, hips and back that her doctors have yet to explain. Crohn's can affect far more than just the bowel so it's very possible that she may be experiencing some form of Extra Intestinal Manifestation brought on by the pregnancy or maybe it's some forum of postpartum something or other.
So to sum up, I've been on medication constantly but it's very possible that it was the wrong medication since I wound up needing surgery and my sister did not. Perhaps the meds worked better for her but maybe a biologic or combination of something else would have been best for me yet back then a lot of drugs hadn't been approved in the US yet.