1 year ago my daughter started complaining about stomach pain. It was a daily nagging ache in her stomach that we couldn’t explain, so I took her to Urgent Care in our town (small town equivalent to Emergency) to get to the bottom of it. She was complaining a great deal, doubled over and pale, so I thought this would be the right move. We headed over, and the waiting regimen began. We eventually saw a Dr., who ordered xrays, did vitals etc. and waited more. Eventually the results came back, and the Dr. said she was constipated. All we had to do is up the fiber, drink more water and get things moving. Good to go.
Two weeks later, we were back again. This time after the xrays, they said things were cleared out a lot more, but to keep it up. Give Tylenol for pain if necessary, but just keep up the water and fiber, perhaps add in restorlax (similar to Metamucil) and things should be good.
A few more weeks went by, and the pain was still there. It usually hit at night, and would get worse and worse. I tried establishing a pattern. Could it be hormones? Food? Surely not – she eats, that’s ridiculous. Stress? Bullying? A close friend of hers had just moved away, and that seemed to make things worse. I was thoroughly convinced that this was it. (Later I found out this girl had been the source of severe bullying for 7 years).
As the months went on, we ended up back in either emergency, or Urgent Care, with each visit been at least 8 hours or longer. I spent many of those visits in a chair trying to lean my head on the counter and sleep. We went back 18 times between February and August and even went to a psychologist. The pain continued to get worse, and worse, and worse.
Every Dr. had a different explanation. One told us adolescent abdominal migraines. One said it could be crones and we were scheduled for tests. Another said IBS – referrals to the GI clinic were based on the level of emergency and had a 6 month waiting list. One Dr. said this was something she would just have to live with. We would have to get used to it. That night I remember specifically, and I’ll never forget it. We were both so discouraged. She slept with me that night and she cried herself to sleep. Once she had finally fallen asleep, I then took my turn. The tears flowed a long time that night.
Again the pain came, and we ended up in Urgent Care. This time, the Dr. gave her IV meds – Toradol, Naprosyn, and even 3 shots of Phentanol (extremely addictive!) This actually seemed to take the edge off, but the only problem was that because it worked once, she wanted it every single time. The last time we visited the Emergency department for the stomach pain, a senior Dr. came in, and said although every single test was negative, we needed to realize that she was glucose intolerant, and that all the problems were stemming from her diet. We needed to go at least 2 months gluten free and then reevaluate.
I spent a ton of money. Medications, imported temperature sensitive probiotics, essential oils, gluten free food, specialty teas, books, cookbooks………everything I could think of, yet nothing was working. Plus, on top of the stomach pain, we were getting arm pain, chest pains, headaches….it was overwhelming.
After she was admitted to hospital, they started testing for the source of the pain. They even wondered at one point if her heart was failing. After months of testing, counseling, psychotherapy, group sessions, and more, they discovered that the pain was purely the result of extreme stress and anxiety, and malnutrition didn’t help either.
She’s been on a 2 day trial home. Yesterday was pretty good, however she discovered after reading a pamphlet in my purse, the side effect of one of her meds is hunger, which made her upset. She hardly ate yesterday. Breakfast today – ½ cup of Special K with a glass of water. The pain is back. Requests for painkillers are starting already. I can’t tell you how frustrated this makes me. All the feelings of those nights in emergency, all those different opinions, and all of the exhaustion comes flooding back.
I know the cause. Stress. Anxiety. Ugly, ugly stuff. The challenge is how do I figure out the trigger and deal with it before it get’s bad again? She knows deep down it’s stress, but either can’t or doesn’t want to admit it. Dealing with the cause can be as or even more painful then the pain itself.
I have to be patient and not let frustration get the best of me. We have a long way to go.