Collagenous Gastritis

Posted by e @epvb, Mar 27, 2017

I was recently diagnosed with collagenous gastritis which is very rare. I'm looking for anyone else who has similar diagnosis.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Digestive Health Support Group.

@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

I didn’t know that an antidepressant could mess up you digestive system. I am on mirtazspine, but I have such terrible GERD it is giving me pneumonia. Any help?!!!

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

We are just looking into it. He will start mirtazspine tomorrow but seeing @cammerzell I am very concerned.

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

Dr. Murray said that Budesonide was not the best option for us, @mindi

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

Mirtazapine was one of the anti-depressants that I tried but was unable to continue. The worst side effect for me was drowsiness that lasted well into the afternoon even after taking it for quite some time. I was only on 1/2 pill of the lowest dose but I could not get through the day without long naps. I am hoping you have better success with it.

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@kacolton

@epvb I was diagnosed a couple years ago with collagenous gastritis (CG) by Dr. Murray and Dr. Acosta at Mayo Clinic, Rochester. It first started in 2013 after a stressful period i was experiencing heartburn all the time and anemia - i had an endoscopy, and they didn't see anything. Then, I had a massive GI bleed (hematemesis + melena). I was hospitalized for about 2 weeks and had a transfusion, and they did a bunch of endoscopies and just assumed I had regular case of bad gastritis. After that, i stopped eating or digesting anything that could make my gastritis worse, but I unfortunately had a second bleed in 2014, and that's when they finally found out about my CG. I contacted Joseph Murray at Mayo and they gave me budesonide to take twice a day. Although it has been helpful since then, I'm having a rebound of symptoms just recently, so I'm looking to connect with people to see what worked for them. I'm wondering if one day they'll find the root cause (like they did with celiac). A lot of the definitions/profiles of collagenous gastritis don't really fit my experience, so I'm curious to see what other people have been through.

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VI live in Sweden, my daughter is CG vi don’t have an specialist doctor here my daughter is 9 yo she is paint and I always crying and I don’t know what vi are doing .please help us.
Thank

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@kacolton

@epvb I was diagnosed a couple years ago with collagenous gastritis (CG) by Dr. Murray and Dr. Acosta at Mayo Clinic, Rochester. It first started in 2013 after a stressful period i was experiencing heartburn all the time and anemia - i had an endoscopy, and they didn't see anything. Then, I had a massive GI bleed (hematemesis + melena). I was hospitalized for about 2 weeks and had a transfusion, and they did a bunch of endoscopies and just assumed I had regular case of bad gastritis. After that, i stopped eating or digesting anything that could make my gastritis worse, but I unfortunately had a second bleed in 2014, and that's when they finally found out about my CG. I contacted Joseph Murray at Mayo and they gave me budesonide to take twice a day. Although it has been helpful since then, I'm having a rebound of symptoms just recently, so I'm looking to connect with people to see what worked for them. I'm wondering if one day they'll find the root cause (like they did with celiac). A lot of the definitions/profiles of collagenous gastritis don't really fit my experience, so I'm curious to see what other people have been through.

Jump to this post

I don’t know where in Sweden you live, but usually you find specialists at the major hospitals- especially university hospitals. Could you ask her regular doctor if they can find out for you and give her a referral. Don’t give up. In my experience one has to be a little pushy to get things done there. Good luck!

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@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

@kellye5 I also have leg pain/aches and have not heard anyone else complain about these. Is there anything that helps you with this or have any doctors made any recommendations for the leg aches? The drs I have seen who know about cg do not believe that the leg pain is associated with it. Thank you.

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

Same for my son but you are maybe the 5th person to report these symptoms...While not a dr. I believe they are connected. He will take ES Tylenol. CBD. Not much helps with this disease I am afraid. Best of luck. We return to Mayo in October. so far deteriorating health since our visit. It is a beast.

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

Although I have been told to limit ibuprofen, I find that that is the only thing that helps the leg aches and I take it when they are bad. It provides relief. I was not aware that others had mentioned the muscle aches so I appreciate your response @kellye5

REPLY
@lgc15

Hi there. I am a 25 year old woman and was told two days ago by Stanford that I have CG. This diagnosis came after a long road of doctor visits to my local doctors office. It first started when my doctor realized that my anemia was not normal. I have been anemic since I was in the 3rd grade. Growing up I was a very small eater and didn't ever feel "good". It came in waves mostly so I learned to live with the feeling. In 2017 my doctor sent me to a hemotologist to get my anemia checked. It was that doctor who sent me to get a colonoscopy and upper endoscopy to see if I was bleeding internally or if my body was simply not absorbing iron. I had a iron transfusion then my produces. The colon area looked clear, but my stomach was a different story. I had 3 stomach ulcers and severe inflammation in my stomach lining. I was given Omeprazole that I still take every morning and that helped me a lot. Without it, I'm having severe stomach pains, vomiting after every bite of food, no matter what I'm eating or drinking, like chicken broth. It's truly one of the worst pains I've ever felt. I went back and had two more endoscopies, my ulcers healed but my inflammation was concerning to my doctor. He took a ton of biopsies, blood test and nothing was making sense. He thought it was an autoimmune, but he couldn't make sense of the test results. He refereed me to Stanford to see if they could help. They reviewed my pathology tests and came back with the CG diagnosis. I have a meeting back at Stanford on the 24th to come up with a plan on how to move forward.

Since I finally got the answer I've been waiting forever for, I'm feeling very mixed emotions. I have waited for this answer for quiet sometime. But I didn't expect it to be some 'rare disease'. I also read that it does tie into my anemia. That blows me away because i was always told that my anemia is my fault because I wasn't taking care of myself or eating properly. I never understood why I was such small eater. I would get stressed out eating over at someone's house because I didn't want them to get offended that I wasn't eating a ton of food. I didn't understand at random times why I would throw up. I would to start not feeling good when I was doing fun things and I would think to myself "come on stomach, not now, not today." To say I'm glad I finally got an answer isn't right. I'm not glad because it's a diagnosis that doesn't have a lot of answers. I know what I have but I don't truly understand what it means. But on the other hand, I was glad because it could be way worse. It could have been something that could end my life or dramatically change my life as it is right now.

So for the few of us out there that has CG, how did it change your life and how do you go about life with this? Did you stop eating everything you loved? Diet change? Are you taking certain medicine that helps? Do any of you have anemia as well? Iron infusions?

Jump to this post

I don’t suffer leg pain. My pain is only in stomach and gut. However, have you tried Magnesium supplement?
Perhaps painful legs may be related to not getting adequate nutrition due to issue with stomach.
Magnesium helps leg cramps so might be worth a try, that is if you haven’t already. Would not work instantly but maybe after taking for few weeks.

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