Guest guest Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 << >> Patty, I don't have any answers for you and Cassie but I will tell you a little of my story. At this point I am being told I do not have CP, but have recurring acute pancreatitis. My episodes began again in July of this year. They first began in Jan 2000 and then I quit having them for about a year. The doctors are insistent that my pancreas is actually perfectly healthy (according to the ct scans, mrcp, etc. - they can't get to my pancreas via ercp because I have had a gastric bypass and my intestines are routed differently). I have been in the hospital 8 times since July and I have had so many episodes of the same severe pain that I could not begin to count. My pancreas enzymes have only been elevated 3 of the times that I was hospitalized. My liver enzymes have been elevated with most of the episodes, but I've had a few where even my liver enzymes were normal or close to normal. The doctors are insisting that the real root of my problems is my bile duct and/or adhesions interfering with the bile duct. My GI says it is adhesions. My general surgeon is insistent that it is the bile duct itself. He says despite the fact that I had two sphincterotomies via ERCP back in 2000, that he is positive that my bile duct and/or sphincter of oddi is malfunctioning. He says that sometimes it only malfunctions enough to cause me severe pain and nausea/vomiting; other times it malfunctions enough to back the bile up and irritate the liver (thus elevating the liver enzymes); other times it malfunctions enough to irrititate the liver and pancreas (thus raising the liver and panc enzymes). He says the pain is very real and the worst imaginable despite the sometimes normal lab work. Unfortunately, he does not feel confident to do surgery on my bile duct, so I've been referred to a biliary who will look at the ERCP films and repeat the CT scan on Friday and decide if he can do anything to help me. I don't know if any of this info applies to Cassie but I do know the pain is real despite the lab work. W. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 << >> Patty, I don't have any answers for you and Cassie but I will tell you a little of my story. At this point I am being told I do not have CP, but have recurring acute pancreatitis. My episodes began again in July of this year. They first began in Jan 2000 and then I quit having them for about a year. The doctors are insistent that my pancreas is actually perfectly healthy (according to the ct scans, mrcp, etc. - they can't get to my pancreas via ercp because I have had a gastric bypass and my intestines are routed differently). I have been in the hospital 8 times since July and I have had so many episodes of the same severe pain that I could not begin to count. My pancreas enzymes have only been elevated 3 of the times that I was hospitalized. My liver enzymes have been elevated with most of the episodes, but I've had a few where even my liver enzymes were normal or close to normal. The doctors are insisting that the real root of my problems is my bile duct and/or adhesions interfering with the bile duct. My GI says it is adhesions. My general surgeon is insistent that it is the bile duct itself. He says despite the fact that I had two sphincterotomies via ERCP back in 2000, that he is positive that my bile duct and/or sphincter of oddi is malfunctioning. He says that sometimes it only malfunctions enough to cause me severe pain and nausea/vomiting; other times it malfunctions enough to back the bile up and irritate the liver (thus elevating the liver enzymes); other times it malfunctions enough to irrititate the liver and pancreas (thus raising the liver and panc enzymes). He says the pain is very real and the worst imaginable despite the sometimes normal lab work. Unfortunately, he does not feel confident to do surgery on my bile duct, so I've been referred to a biliary who will look at the ERCP films and repeat the CT scan on Friday and decide if he can do anything to help me. I don't know if any of this info applies to Cassie but I do know the pain is real despite the lab work. W. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 I'm afraid there is no set time limit before the enzymes stop elevating. For some, it starts quickly, for others, it takes a long time. I know people who's enzymes have never been elevated. It took me 30 years to have my enzymes stop elevating. That's part of why it's so hard for doctors to diagnose chronic pancreatitis, because it varies so much between people and probably why Hopkin's website does not mention how long it takes before the enzymes stop rising. Wish I had better news. Kimber -- Kimber Vallejo, CA hominid2@... Southwest and California Representative Pancreatitis Association, International Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.