- Jun 10, 2005
- 2,923
- 2
- 0
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: GrantMeThePower
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: GrantMeThePower
Originally posted by: eits
have you noticed any changes in your bowels? stomach pains? joint pains? back pains? hip pains? itchy skin?
No. None of those things. No rashes, no nothing. I havne't felt anything different or wrong.
I played basketball over the weekend and had a lot of trouble. But I've been going through a really stressful time and haven't been eating much and have been smoking too much, so I thought that was all it was.
On the stomach pain thing- i have had stomach pain, but its been stress and lack of eating related I thought.
I've always been very consistent with my weight, but by not eating for a couple weeks and being stressed and not sleeping as well i lost a lot of weight right before the physical. I told him about all that though, and he said those things wouldn't have shown such a high level in that test.
could potentially be the start of crohn's... i doubt it, though.
i assume the doc is in the "wait and see" period and will check your crr in a month...
whatever it is, if it is anything, it's not like there's a small window of opportunity to catch it and treat it before it becomes incurable. if it's anything, it's most likely a long-term illness that needs to be monitored and treated for symptoms...
I just looked up crohns disease. That sounds pretty scary. But unless i am missundertanding the symptoms, it doesn't sound like me. I have pretty consistent bowls. I've never noticed bloody stools. I've never had to go "up to 20 times in a day". I mean, i'm pretty much one and done. I dont ever recall having to go in the middle of the night.
I've had stomach pains throughout my life...but its almost always been assosciated with stress and anxeity. I dont know if that is indicitive of ulcers or just a phycosomatic response to the emotions.
You're also correct in the "wait and see" and recheck in a month. Thats what he said. but it leaves me in limbo and is scary.
When you say, "if its anything, its probably a long term illness that needs to be monitored and treated..." that is pretty much what scares me a lot. I mean if it was like, you have a flu, you'll feel better in a couple weeks then i'd feel ok. but if they say, you have a disease that will be with you for the rest of your life and you need to take medication and you may need surgury or you may live a limited life like this and that....thats what my fear is. Like you say, if its anything, its something really bad.
well, plus, if you were to have crohn's, you'd have had it by now... i haven't heard of many cases where the patient got crohn's in their 40s-50s... it usually gets diagnosed in the teen years.
I'm 26.
