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Chronic Gut Issues

Digestive Health | Last Active: May 21 9:57pm | Replies (24)

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@dlydailyhope

@lexic10
Here are a couple thoughts to consider:
1. Covid 19 is known to mess with your gut. See links below.
-https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/covid-19-disrupts-gut-microbiome
-https://time.com/7027179/covid-19-gastrointestinal-symptoms/
-https://www.bmj.com/content/385/bmj.q842
2. Did the tests indicate where you had internal bleeding (was it in your stomach or colon)? If you use aspirin, Motrin/ibuprofen, Advil, or Aleve (all NSAIDs), this can cause bleeding in your gastrointestinal tract. It would be good to stop taking them for pain relief and use Tylenol/acetaminophen instead. Check your endoscopy and colonoscopy reports to see if it showed any erosions or bleeding. I had to stop NSAIDs when they found erosions in my esophagus and stomach (diagnosed with esophagitis/gastritis and prescribed Omeprazole).
3. With any bleeding internally or with heavy periods and if a vegetarian/vegan, you want to make sure to take a multivitamin and extra iron. You should take iron on an empty stomach and the preferred iron that doesn’t upset your stomach would be a polysaccharide iron complex. I had iron deficiency due to heavy menstrual bleeding plus mostly vegetarian diet. I had a D&C procedure and they put in an IUD which helped stop the heavy bleeding and iron deficiency was resolved.
4. Since you are vomiting a lot, you may want to make sure to drink at least 50% of of your weight in ounces of water with added electrolytes (like LMNT brand) to replace lost minerals. For example, if you are 120 pounds, you would want to make sure to have at least 60 ounces of water with electrolytes. The electrolytes will help you keep/retain more of the water in your body rather than peeing it all out.
5. My suggestion is to talk to your gastroenterologist to ask for a HYDA scan of your gallbladder to check function. I had this done after they did all other testing and found that my gallbladder was only ejecting 7% bile after a meal when it should be a minimum of 35%-40%. This is called biliary dyskinesia and can cause abdominal pain/discomfort and digestion issues.
-https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/23932-biliary-dyskinesia
-https://www.verywellhealth.com/biliary-dyskinesia-4797127
6. It would be good to see a nutritionist/dietitian to check your diet and supplements and make recommendations. They can do bloodwork to see if you have vitamin/mineral deficiencies or toxicities or inflammation markers. You may also benefit from seeing an immunologist for allergy testing if you haven’t had this done. You may have new allergies to certain foods post Covid.

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Replies to "@lexic10 Here are a couple thoughts to consider: 1. Covid 19 is known to mess with..."

@lexic10
Sorry…my links weren’t active.
1. https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/covid-19-disrupts-gut-microbiome
2. https://time.com/7027179/covid-19-gastrointestinal-symptoms/
3. https://www.bmj.com/content/385/bmj.q842
4. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/23932-biliary-dyskinesia
5. https://www.verywellhealth.com/biliary-dyskinesia-4797127

Everyone on Mayo Connect would be happy to help you navigate the healthcare system and share our experiences which may help you advocate for yourself to get the care you need and deserve. You are too young to be suffering alone. If you have results you have questions about, share them here but make sure to not include personally identifiable information. We may spot something in a report that your doctors didn’t discuss with you. I found my own thyroid nodule on a ct scan for something else and an old heart infarct on an ekg that no doctor brought to my attention.