Hi ladies,
i have been lurking and reading this board for a year now and have just plucked up courage to post. I am from the U.K. and from reading on here either our consultants aren't great OR things are just done very differently in terms of treatment for kids.
Our story: when my son was 9 I noticed drips of blood on the floor and on toilet after he had been for a poo, by the time I had got to see a pedeatrician that has all stopped so they discharged us.
Last Christmas (almost 3 years later) it started up again just after he started secondary school. Fortunately not long after we were in lockdown so he was home, pain free but very smelly bloody stools.
Fecal cal came back at 2,200 so he was rushed for scopes and UC was confirmed.
By the time he had this (3 months after blood had started) it stopped again on its own so no need for steroids.
so he returned home from hospital and put directly on Pentasa.
i went crazy to research IBDs and got myself into an incredibly dark place, no one to talk to that understood, not even my husband as he is just very different to me and deals with issues as they arise.
i am on egg shells waiting for a flare to happen and I know From reading here that pentasa alone is very mild drug. Maybe I shouid be grateful for this but I'm not sure I am.
his last calprotectin was 26 in January but he has only had one stool test in a year and I get a call from the nurse every few months.
I wouid feel much happier if the stool tests were more regular, shouid they be?
He has told me he gets a mild tummy pain on is left side - how am I to know this is related or something different. I've told the nurse and she is ordering bloods but what's the point in that?
i just feel and wish that he was being checked up on on a more regular basis or am I being precious?
whst is the process I feel the hospitsl
Have just left us, we are at St Thomas's Hospital in London so have a good gastro department for kids
anyway not sure point of post but wanted to join and say hi!
also does the worry and anxiety get easier?
i have been lurking and reading this board for a year now and have just plucked up courage to post. I am from the U.K. and from reading on here either our consultants aren't great OR things are just done very differently in terms of treatment for kids.
Our story: when my son was 9 I noticed drips of blood on the floor and on toilet after he had been for a poo, by the time I had got to see a pedeatrician that has all stopped so they discharged us.
Last Christmas (almost 3 years later) it started up again just after he started secondary school. Fortunately not long after we were in lockdown so he was home, pain free but very smelly bloody stools.
Fecal cal came back at 2,200 so he was rushed for scopes and UC was confirmed.
By the time he had this (3 months after blood had started) it stopped again on its own so no need for steroids.
so he returned home from hospital and put directly on Pentasa.
i went crazy to research IBDs and got myself into an incredibly dark place, no one to talk to that understood, not even my husband as he is just very different to me and deals with issues as they arise.
i am on egg shells waiting for a flare to happen and I know From reading here that pentasa alone is very mild drug. Maybe I shouid be grateful for this but I'm not sure I am.
his last calprotectin was 26 in January but he has only had one stool test in a year and I get a call from the nurse every few months.
I wouid feel much happier if the stool tests were more regular, shouid they be?
He has told me he gets a mild tummy pain on is left side - how am I to know this is related or something different. I've told the nurse and she is ordering bloods but what's the point in that?
i just feel and wish that he was being checked up on on a more regular basis or am I being precious?
whst is the process I feel the hospitsl
Have just left us, we are at St Thomas's Hospital in London so have a good gastro department for kids
anyway not sure point of post but wanted to join and say hi!
also does the worry and anxiety get easier?