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DiscussionStomach pain and throwing up repeatedly
Digestive Health | Last Active: Aug 23 12:31pm | Replies (131)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "I have been dealing with upper stomach pain and nausea for 4 years. Started two years..."
Hi @trip17, I extend my welcome to you as well. I can identify with about 98% of your story and frustration. The only difference is I did not have a nerve block device implanted.
I had my gallbladder removed in 2007 and didn't find relief until 2010 when I traveled to Mayo Clinic in Rochester to be a part of their Chronic Pain Rehabilitation Program. Up until then I, like you, had every test done that they could think of, all that came back as negative or normal. I was on hydrocodone for pain, Lunesta for sleep, phenergan for nausea, 2 blood pressure medications, and an antidepressant. After spending 3 weeks in Rochester, we learned what was going on. It was hard for me to understand at first because I had trusted that the only way I was getting relief was through the medication I was taking. My doctors explained that it was Opioid-Induced Hyperalgesia. Certain people, depending on their genetics, develop a "tolerence" to pain medicine, while other people can develop Opioid-Induced Hyperalgesia. They are not the same thing. After your body has been on a pain medicine for an extended amount of time opioids can produce the opposite reaction in the nervous system causing hyperactivation, which leads to an increase in the pain a person feels.
They were able to taper me down and eventually off of the medication and several others that I took because of my pain, like my sleep medicine. I added a link about what this is. It may not be what is happening with you, but when I read your post it sounded all too familiar. Have they tried you on any other type of medications for the pain or only the Hydrocodone?
https://www.hss.edu/conditions_opioid-induced-hyperalgesia.asp
I can definitely understand that. I could not do it on my own, which is why I had to seek medical intervention. My pain started from what they called "phantom gallstone" pain and scar tissue that built up around the surgical site where the gallbladder was removed. They did an exploratory surgery, but they had already started me on the medication. Every time I would ease off of the medication I would get flu like symptoms with intense sweating which was my body going through physical withdrawal even though mentally I was not addicted to them. Your mentality can say I don't need these, but your body has the potential to withdrawal on any medication that you have taken for a long period of time, especially pain medicine. I do wish you the best and hope either what I have provided or what Colleen has provided can help!
that's exactly what happens! Flu like symptoms, pain and nausea in upper stomach and intense sweating.
You said everything I'm thinking. I want to go to Jacksonville Mayo too, but traveling now is not an option, so I'm going to see if I can be treated here in North Texas.
@trip17 - Very interesting to see That you may have a vascular problem causing the pain. There would be a possible way to cure you.
It reminds me of my abdominal pain caused by decreased blood supply to the intestines after meals. There was a large ligament pressing on the celiac artery. The ligament was cut and blood flow restored. A few months later I needed a stent to keep the vessel open. This condition is called Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome—MALS.
The pain I had and what you experienced during your heart test is called abdominal angina. Insufficient blood supply.
Your next vascular test will show where the problem is.
Please get back to us about the outcome.
@hopeful33250 @ trip17 It is interesting in itself that the pain started after gallbladder surgery. My pain also started after gallbladder surgery- although not immediately. Sometimes I wonder if the procedure itself or instrumentation alter the anatomy somehow. I was told my condition was very rare. I was also being treated for another very rare GI condition, caused by bad effects from chemo.
The important thing is that it will be more common to test for vascular problems when working a patient up for abdominal pain.
They haven't yet as I haven't done the tests to date, but during a stress test they injected Adenosine to raise my heartbeat. At that point, my stomach pain became excruciating. That leads them to believe my chronic stomach pain is a vascular issue. Tests are being set up.
@hopeful33250 - I had so many tests done when I first started getting evaluated for my abdominal pain, but a Doppler ultrasound of the abdomen showed narrowing of arteries- change in speed of blood flow. To confirm this I had a CT angiogram of abdomen that clearly showed narrowing of the celiac artery- due to compression by a ligament.
Thank you! That is exactly what three of my Doctors are now suspecting now because When they injected Adenosine during the stress test my upper stomach pain became EXCRUCIATING. Because that drug constricts arteries to make the heart work harder, if something in my upper stomach has a clog, this drug would have basically closed it causing the pain. I’m seeing a Vascular Specialist hopefully next week. How was your treated and how long until you felt normal? I’ve been sick so long I don’t remember what normal feels like. -Chris
Connect

Hi @trip17 and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. That's quite the history and journey you've laid out. I've added your post to the Digestive Health group as well (https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/digestive-gastrointestinal-problems/). You might be interested in participating is some of these related discussions:
- Chronic Abdominal Wall Pain: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/page/gastroenterology-and-gi-surgery/newsfeed-post/chronic-abdominal-wall-pain/
- Has anyone been diagnosed with Abdominal Wall Pain: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/has-anyone-been-diagnosed-with-abdominal-wall-pain/
- Complications/symptoms after Gallbladder laparoscopic Surgery https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/nausea-pain-and-headaches-after-gallbladder-laparoscopic-surgery/
- Comparison of Spinal Cord Stimulators from Boston Sci., Nevro https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/comparison-of-spinal-cord-stimulators-from-boston-sci-nevro/
You may also be interested in following the discussions in these groups:
- Digestive Health https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/digestive-gastrointestinal-problems/
- Neuropathy https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/neuropathy/
- Sleep Health https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/sleep-health/
I hope some of these discussions help with your search for answers and that UT Southwestern can help. FYI, Mayo Clinic is seeing patients during the pandemic, but I can understand getting a consult closer to home during these times.