Thursday, March 1, 2012

Healing & Dealing

Hello Friends!

On a different note, I have had a major prayer answered! God is so good. About four years ago, I was really sick and my spleen and liver were both swollen. I was tested for mono and leukemia, but thankfully, I was negative for both, but we didn't have any answers or a diagnosis. Every year of college I have been tested multiple times for diabetes because my blood levels have gone crazy, but it was never consistently seen through blood tests. Then, after my surgeries, I started having a lot of bowel and stomach pain and issues daily. I was referred to a gastroenterologist where I had tons of tests done including a colonoscopy, but every test and biopsy came back normal. After a few months, I was referred to the University of Iowa and was scheduled to have three hydrogen breath tests done.

A hydrogen breath test determines how much hydrogen your body produces after breaking down sugars. The production of hydrogen doesn't normally take place, but it results form your body's inability to break down sugar in the small intestine so the sugar moves further down into the colon where it is broken down by bacteria, which release hydrogen.

I was given a hydrogen breath tests for glucose, fructose and lactose. I was tested with glucose to determine whether or not I had a bacterial over growth in my small intestine. I was tested with fructose to determine whether or not my body is able to digest fructose. I was also tested with lactose to make sure my body was able to break down lactose, the sugar in milk.

About two weeks later, I received a call from a nurse. She shared with me that the glucose and lactose tests came back normal, but that the fructose test showed that I was fructose intolerant. This means that my body is missing the proper enzyme that breaks down fructose.

On one hand, this was a huge blessing, but on the other, it was anything but a blessing.

My spleen and liver had been swollen in response to the excess build up of fructose in my blood. My blood sugar fluctuated like crazy because the fructose and sucrose I had consumed could not enter my blood cells and be used for energy so it would hang out in my blood, making my blood sugar really high sometimes and then crash when it was filtered out. I experienced bowel and stomach issues because there had been such a build up of fructose in my colon.

As you may have wondered, fructose and sucrose are in EVERYTHING! This is why this is anything but a blessing. The only treatment at this point in time is to eliminate all forms of fructose, sucrose and sorbitol from my diet. Eventually, I will be able to test out different foods to see how much of them I can handle.

Scarred for Life

Wow it has been a long time! 

Just a quick update from the last 8 months...

During my second surgery, there were a lot of complications. I noticed when I woke up from the second surgery that something wasn't right. I was in much more pain in my right shoulder and arm. My right arm was in a sling and was iced.

I started asking a lot of questions, but there weren't any answers. I was restricted to my bed for the first 24 hours and I was on a specific diet; both of which were not required after the first surgery. I found that odd because I was told that it was just protocol...

Over the next couple of days, the pain decreased but my family and I noticed a couple of strange things. I was not able to breathe completely and my voice had changed! It was much higher and kind of whiny. 

When we met with the surgeon on the final day, the surgeon told me that the muscle that was removed was much larger than anticipated and the nerves to my diaphragm and to my vocal chords were nicked during the procedure!

I am so thankful and blessed that these nerves were able to fully heal over the following months! Praise the Lord.

For a while, my scars would hurt quite a bit because they were trying to heal, but the pain is mostly gone. I am also very thankful because the surgery seems to be a success! I no longer have the muscle spasms in my arms to the extent that I had them and I can raise my arms above my head without them falling asleep immediately!

My six month post-surgery check-up went very well! My recovery has reached a leveling point where I am not getting any worse or any better. I am so thankful. In a few short weeks, I will only be seen every eight weeks instead of every week, and I will only have one doctor!

My scars on my neck are fading, but here is a picture from 4th of July so you can have an idea of what they look like....

 This pic was taken at the Grand View Campus Fellowship Valentine's Day Dinner on February 10, 2012... My scars look much different. Now, they are still there, but they blend more in with the color of my skin. It kind of seems like I just have super defined collar bones :)

I thank you for all of your prayers and support throughout the entire process. I am a very blessed woman!