Any new treatments for Vegus nerve injury?
I am diagnosed with Gastroparesis. I took a fall prior to the start of my pain. I hit directly on my tail bone on a carpeted step. Didn’t think I was hurt at all. But looking back now 3 years later and love living through many tests, diet, medication and seem to slowing be getting better, could this fall have started the Gastroparesis? Is there a chance of getting to eat real food again without painful results? Lost from 130 pounds to 102 today. From year 2019 tom2022? Any new treatments for Vegus nerve injury??
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G Poem is a procedure done endoscoply during which s “tunnel” is made by separating layers of the mucosa in the pylorus so that food empties from the stomach into the small intestine. My husband also takes an antihistamine, cyyproheptadine, which somehow enables him to eat more. The weight gain is slow , but at least he can eat larger amounts than before the procedure. The GPOEM was done at Columbia New York Presbyterian Hospital by Dr Sethi
There is a typo “during which a tunnel”
Thank you so very much for answering me. I appreciate it so much.
I will check with the Motility Dept and the surgeon at University of Louisville to see if they can do this surgery.
Prayers for your husband to continue to gain weight and eat more good foods. Brenda Harvey
I have slow motility and pelvic floor issues. My pelvic floor therapist does visceral mobilization which helps my constipation. My insurance does cover it.Good luck. I don’t have near your issues but can totally sympathize.
Gastric per oral endoscopic myotomy
I have achalasia and was given botox injection in esophagus. Worked wonderfully for about 3 months. Stopped and then I had balloon dilation which worked wonderfully for two years. Starting to have some pressure-type
discomfort, not pain again. I read all the posted letters which made me start to think about the vagal nerve
and all the nerves in the stomach. They're responsible, I think, for the rhythms responsible for eating, digesting, swallowing and going to the bathroom. The mystery to me is why no one has experimented with drugs that control the body's rhythms in all the mentioned areas. Perhaps, there has been experimentation but I've tried to find articles and haven't been successful. It would be safer by far to take a pill or have an injection than have
an operation. The botox shot seems to be a step in the right direction. However, I've been told that eventually the botox loses its effectiveness and that too many shots scar the esophagus which makes the POEM procedure difficult to do. Curious about medications other Connectors have been given.
What age was your husband when he had this G POEM procedure?
I am thinking I might be too old.
Can he eat foods now such as a salad, fresh fruits, a hamburger?
I am so tired of baked or boiled chicken and fish! Would love a salad so so much or “real ice cream” in place of made from coconut!
Your phrenic nerve(s) might have been damaged during the surgery. Here is an anatomy resource for you.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513325/
Thank so much, seeing neurosurgeon tomorrow in Boston. I will not agree to any surgery but I have many notes for my two year check-up and I’ve added that.
My husband is 82 and he had the procedure two months ago. He can eat more food than he did before the procedure, but he has not yet been able to put on weight He can eat salad and eats normal food but at times still gets a feeling of being full when he has not eaten that much.