SBO due to Adhesion
This is my first time reaching out to such an outlet but my frustration with my reoccurring issues is completely distressing me. I am a 55 year old woman who has just experienced an eighth SMO due to adhesions. This has happened throughout a ten year period. My first surgery was at 17 and mid life many additional surgeries. Has anyone gambled on having adhesions removed (even though the risk for more is high) as an attempt to curtail these episodes? It has been discussed each time I have been hospitalized yet when I sultatioday arrives I am convinced to waito for the time. I find theNG tube traumatic and have only had it placed once. I would appreciate any advise or thoughts from your experiences.
Thank you,
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@sita
Good addition to this discussion, thank you!
@michrn I would encourage you to connect with a GI doctor again. Remedies suggested by others will not help you if your diagnosis is different. Will you make a call to a GI specialist?
Yes Ill have to get my family md to refer me..
@michrn , there is something called ideopathic bowel obstruction--I believe it mimics the symptoms of a mechanical bowel obstruction, but with no discernible actual blockage. You may want to google it. Good luck, and I hope you find some relief and answers!
@19630831 , I have had at least 30 adhesion-related small bowel obstructions from various surgeries over the past 45 years or so. So far I have refused the NG tube in the hospital, because all of the sbo's, although severe and horribly painful (and, of course, dangerous), have fortunately tended to resolve by themselves overnight. In the ER I just get pain meds, Zofran for vomiting, and fluids. I hope that I never HAVE to get the tube!
I had regular surgery when I was 12 or 13 to try to deal with the adhesions I'd gotten as an infant from surgery for an intusseception (I can never remember how to spell that!). That was in the mid-1970's, and probably eventually just made things worse.
Then, a few years ago, a laparoscopic surgeon pretty much assured me that he could permanently solve the issue with laparascopic lysis of my adhesions. I was desperate, so I went for it. Afterwards, he told me that he didn't think I'd have any more sbo's. However, I have had at least three or four since then. Perhaps results are different for different people, but based on my experience I wouldn't endorse surgery. For me, it was a waste of time and money, and my heart was broken when I realized that it had done no good!
There HAS to be a better solution...I wish someone would do the research and find out soon.
@hopeful33250 , may I ask if you are on a permanent liquid diet? I've gone mostly liquids, smoothies, and soft, easy-to-digest foods, but I have been desperate enough to consider trying to stay on a liquid diet altogether--I know that diet doesn't actually prevent or cause sbo's caused by adhesions, but heavy meals of solid foods definitely make things a LOT worse if an sbo starts while the food is still in my stomach. I sometimes wish I could survive on nothing at all, so that I don't have to go through the misery of having food bumping up against a blockage!
No,@nancybev.I only use liquids when I'm having a lot of pain. I do keep my diet light, both in the amount of food I eat and the type of foods.
It is different for everyone to find what works for them. Your doctor can help.
Visceral massage done by a good PT can gradually break up the adhesions. That worked for me for about 20 years. Good luck!
@nancybev
I would also like to add that while my diet isn't completely liquid, even the foods that I do eat are high in liquid content. Fruit like watermelon is high in water content. Here is an article from the internet regarding foods high in water content, https://oureverydaylife.com/286640-list-of-water-rich-foods.html
Do you have soups, etc.?
@hopeful33250 , so far I haven't found a doctor who can answer my questions--that's why I'm here! 🙂 My diet at present consists mostly of juices, smoothies, soups, tofu, ice cream/popcicles, fruit, and gluten-free bread that I try to chew really well. (I seem to have a sensitivity to gluten, and I think it might make the sbo situation worse). The only real meal I eat is in the morning. I will keep your good advice to try to eat "watery" foods as much as possible too!
The problem is that when I get an obstruction even water doesn't seem to get through. If I have anything at all in my stomach when an obstruction starts, it's a bad situation (as I'm sure you all know!). So I try to eat stuff that can be digested quickly, to lessen the possibility that anything will get stuck behind an obstruction before I realize one is starting.