CB, Sorry you are still having digestive troubles
Make sure you keep us all updated on your test results.
I didn't have to have those testss - they found the stones on the ultrasound and that was that. Good Luck with everything and happy b-day in advance
man you are lucky...that's what I was hoping for. But I hope this test found something!! It'd be nice if I could get results this week...I will try!
I find this so amusing that I find this post right in the middle of all my stomach problems. The pains started months ago (around December) and would just happen right after my period. Basically by April they are daily. Been to my regular doctor who did an ultrasound and protonix medicine. Nothing. Went to a specialist who put me on prevacid and did a scope of the stomach. Nothing. Finally had the HIDA scan. During the second part after they inject the CCK - pain like every symptom I've been having for months. Results - gallbladder functioning at 12%. So it's coming out on June 18th. Seeing my gyn. about the wacky timing with my period. About every person my husband talked to said the same thing. My gallbladder didn't show anything until the HIDA scan. I'm guessing because of insurance they have to take you through the steps. I'm trying not to freak out about the surgery. I've never been put under before. Also praying my recovery is easy. I told my boss I'd see her a week after and I'm sticking to it!
did you have pain/pressure during the first hour of the exam? (before the CCK) I did...it was very uncomfortable and I didn't want to lay flat anymore but I knew I had to bear through it so that they could find out what's wrong.
I am glad you finally had the test that showed what is wrong. It's amazing how long so many of us have to endure all this crap until they finally find what's wrong.
I am sure you will be fine in the surgery. I've never had any surgeries, except on my mouth (impacted wisdom teeth removed) so I'm a little nervous, but I know the trade-off will be worth it!! Good luck with your surgery, and I hope you will check in before and after! I will be here to give you encouragement whenever you need it! I KNOW how you feel!!
Hi cherbear! Glad to hear that you had your HIDA scan. I had my gallbladder removed in January of '07. During my senior year of college, I kept getting sick with really bad stomach pain and terrible nausea. Then during my first year of grad school, I was so sick that I missed 3 weeks of school in a row, which is highly unusual for me. I didn't take a medical leave because it was the end of the semester, and I wasn't about to give up the work I already put in!
I've had a gastroenterologist for a few years and I've been diagnosed with Barrett's Esophagus as well as ulcerative colitis so when I started getting pain again, my doctor had a feeling it might be the gallbladder. I went to get a million ultrasounds/sonograms throughout all the stomach pain, but they never showed ANYTHING.
The worst gallbladder attack I had sent me to the hospital. I was at home, extremely nauseous and unable to breathe. I was lying on the recliner in the living room wheezing. When my mom took my temperature and found out that I had a 101.7 fever on top of all of that, she called my doctor who told us to go to the hospital right away for fear that there was fluid around my lungs. It's so terrible that everyone who has gallbladder issues always thinks it's a heart problem or a heart attack. I mean, the attack is terrible, but I think the unknown makes it that much worse!
Of course, nothing was discovered after staying in the hospital for 6 hours or so. My GI doctor sent me for the HIDA scan after another endoscopy showed nothing. And then BAMMM ... tons of pain during the test, which ended up being a GOOD thing because then it meant that we knew what was wrong!
It was the first surgery I've ever had (I'm 23), but I was strangely calm. I had a ton of people supporting me and a ton of people praying for me so I think that really helped a great deal. Unfortunately, though I don't want to scare you just in case you do end up having the surgery, the time after the surgery was the worst experience in my life. I was in so much pain in recovery. The nurses said that because I was so thin (I lost a lot of weight while I was sick and didn't eat ... it was the bad kind of losing weight because I dropped 14 pounds unintentionally in only 2 weeks), they had to pump a lot more carbon dioxide into my system. That caused a lot of pain as the air is trying to escape your body (the shoulders actually hurt a lot because of it).
The vicodin that was prescribed ended up causing more nausea so I took extra strength tylenol instead. I was actually taking part of a study on the effect of anesthesia on girls around my age (to see if there was a market for a post-anesthesia anti-nausea drug for my age group). The carbon dioxide as well as the anesthesia was what made my recovery absolutely horrible.
I think the anesthesia problem is individual though. My friend's friend who also had the surgery a year before (the first time I heard about the surgery) recovered in like 1-2 days and was so bored being at home. I took about a week to recover enough so that I could leave the house. Someone at work just had the surgery and it took her about 4 days for things to start looking better.
But despite that horrible experience, knowing how I would feel after the surgery ... I would definitely go through that tough experience again to know that I can live the rest of my life without experiencing another gallbladder attack! It's WORTH IT. I still stay away from certain foods because mentally I feel like they will stay make me sick even though I'm gallbladder-free, but it's so great to have options with food!
It took me a while to get an appetite back though. For the longest time, I couldn't really taste anything for over a year (my grandfather who also had the surgery had the same problem too). It was only recently that I started being able to taste things again! My mom can now ask me to taste food to see if it needs more salt or sugar ... beforehand I'd always be like, "It needs mroe salt!" But even with that one year of lack of tasting ... I'd STILL have the surgery.
Okay ... so I ended up writing a LOTTTTTT more than I intended ... haha, sorry about that! Even if you didn't read all of it, please know that you are in my thoughts and prayers, and I hope you get some answers (and fixes) soon!
YES! That meal will taste SO MUCH BETTER when you know you can't get sick from it and you can actually enjoy it!
Of course I read it all!! I like reading about everyone's experiences with this!
I am sorry you had such a long road before and after surgery. I never heard of the taste-less experience. I hope I don't lose my sense of taste, because my
free dining Disney trip is in less than a year and I'd really like to enjoy all those free meals!
Did you feel pain BEFORE the CCK was injected? (you did have CCK, right?) Like I said above, I had some pain in the first part of the test, it was a lot of pressure on my right side. I had a little pain during the CCK, but no nausea. I felt lots of pain LATER in the day too.
This will be my first surgery, too. (I'm assuming it will have to come out) I am not too nervous about it now because I'm just ready to have this thing out! If/when I actually have to schedule it, I will probably start to freak out a little--though I am hoping I can remain calm and retain my composure.
DD8 had hers today as well. I work midnights so I was at work when I posted last night. I was about to die by the time I got home at 2 and then had to get up at 3 to go get the other two kids! She did well during hers - and I thought about you when Lauren was doing hers. She fell asleep which helped her be able to be still. She felt a little nauseated during the cck part but was better by the time it was over. She wanted to go to the hospital cafeteria and get a piece of chocolate cake as soon as the test was over! The tech guy said they would read it this afternoon and if I could pull any strings I might get the results today. I probably could have but all I wanted to do was come home and sleep so we will find out Monday. It is probably going to be normal. It is sad when you want something to be wrong - at least that way we can fix the kid!
aww you thought about me? I was thinking about you and your DD too! The first thought was that if it's this hard for ME to lay still this whole time, it can't be easy for an 8 year old! I'm glad she fell asleep. I tried to, but I just couldn't. I surprisingly didn't feel nauseated during the CCK. The tech told me that most people don't have a big problem with that---though I told him I had heard differently.
That would be GREAT to get the results Monday!! They also told me they'd be reading it the same day. I hope it's not normal (you know what I mean by that) though she is just SO young to be going through all this! If mine comes out normal, I will bawl my eyes out, I think I will go through an emotional breakdown. I just can't handle going through any more tests.
I think because your daughter felt nauseated during the test, it will not be normal. How long did it take for her GB to show up on the screen during the first part of the test??
Good luck with whatever the outcome! Please let us know what happens!
I never had all the tests you're having. I had an attack in August of 97....couldn't breath, major pain...the works. DH took me to the ER and the Dr. on call listend to my lungs and said I had pluresy. (sp?) He put me on motrin 800mg and over the next year, every time I had pain, I'd take a pill or two. Almost a year to the day later, I have another MAJOR attack....DH takes me to the ER....different Dr. on duty....they do an x-ray and ultrasound and 2 days later I have laproscopic surgery. Recovery was uncomfortable, but not unbearable. Although for the next month I continued to have alot of pain. GI Dr. said it was "healing pain"....he also said it was "trapped gas". Finally one day when I doubled over at work and had to go to the ER AGAIN, they did an ultrasound and found more stones in my bile duct. A few days later they do another procedure and laser zap them out. No problems after that....unless you count having DD 91/2 months after the second procedure.
I tell everyone that I traded a gallbladder for a daughter!
Good luck to you! Hope everything comes out ok!!
So when the gb is removed, they don't take out the bile duct with it? Did they just miss those existing stones the first time?
congrats on your daughter...you got a good deal!
thanks!! I hope it "comes out" too
