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Cuffitis or pouchitis, or both. Bleeding is usually cuffitis. If it was just a spot or two on the paper, I might say it was bleeding from anal irritation due to the increased frequency. But, if it is enough to be in the stool, more likely to be cuffitis. Occasionally, there is bleeding with pouchitis, but it is not a routine symptom.

Every once in a while I get a cuffitis flare out of the blue and it quickly advances from scant bleeding to double frequency, increased gas, urgency, and frank bleeding. Canasa suppositories turns it around in a few days for me. But I don't wait around for it to fix itself.

I'd call your doctor if I were you.

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
Thank You Jan!

I work at the hospital now, done my first year of med school. The awesome part is that I sometimes work with the surgeon who preformed the surgery on me.

I made an appointment for tomorrow at noon.

Is cuffitis curable?
I am not sick, just stomach is tender and the bleeding wasn't as much when i went for a BM about an hour ago.
LaviSingh
A stricture is a pretty common complication. Basically, it is just the anastomosis scar shrinking. That causes obstructive symptoms, with pain, straining, and yes, sometimes bleeding because of the straining. Easily diagnosed with a simple digital exam. If it is not too bad, the digital exam is also therapeutic, by dilating the stricture (usually painful, but brief). If it is very tight, the dilation is done under anesthesia, either by digital manipulation or balloon dilation by endoscopy. It is not something that requires surgery or a hospital stay, if that helps.

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
If you search around a little, you will find that Cipro is one of the most commonly used antibiotics for pouchitis. The other one is Flagyl. They both are pretty equal in how well they work. I take Flagyl when I need it. If it is the right antibiotic, you should see positive results within 24-72 hours. For me, it is within a few hours of the first dose.

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
so i picked up the medication at 6pm last night, took 1 capsule. today i just took 1 already this morning, will take the next 2 spaced out within 4 hours.

i know it is very early for any improvements but i still feel like crap.
cramping, bloating, diarrhea, and blood stools.

but i don't have a fever, no nausea, and i can sleep well.

when you first had pouchitis, how long till the symptoms cleared?
LaviSingh
Bloody diarrhea is not a common finding with pouchitis. It is almost exclusive to cuffitis. How did your doctor diagnose the pouchitis? If he did not do a rectal exam, and just prescribed based on symptoms, then that might be the problem. Cuffitis is easily found on rectal exam and antibiotics are not the treatment. No scoping needed.

If it is pouchitis, then Cipro may be the wrong antibiotic. Flagyl is the other one used. You can either give it another day or two, or ask your doc about cuffitis and/or Flagyl (unless you are allergic).

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
I thought so. What concerns me is that he would rule out cuffitis, when bleeding is rather specific to cuffitis. Cuffitis otherwise has the same pouchitis symptoms, and bleeding is what sets it apart. It does not mean you cannot have both. I guess if antibiotics are not successful, then you really know.

In my case, Flagyl actually worked well, but I quickly relapsed after discontinuing it. That was when my GI felt that my cuffitis was my real underlying issue. A quick rectal exam revealed a very bumpy rectal cuff mucosa. He then scoped my on the spot, and found that the pouch was fine, but the cuff was severely inflamed. He started me on mesalamine suppositories while I was still taking Flagyl. I then stopped the Flagyl after about a week.

Here is a link to a comprehensive article by Dr. Shen at the Cleveland Clinic. Scroll down to the portion about cuffitis. You will see by the text and the graph, bleeding is rather rare with pouchitis.
http://www.dept-med.pitt.edu/g...eadings/shen2005.pdf

Just trying to help you avoid wasting time, like I did. I messed around with it for years. Back then they did not treat it unless you were very symptomatic. I did not know what to compare with, so I did not complain. That was sort of dumb of me to do.

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
Could be an anal stricture. Again, easily determined by a digital exam. If not a stricture, that sort of symptom could be from a partial obstruction close to your pouch. I know I must have a pesky adhesion near my pouch, because I get symptoms of difficulty emptying, almost constipated feeling every once in a while (like a couple of times a year). It lasts a few days, then resolves by itself.

Another possibility is a twisted or "internal prolapse," which is basically a intussusception. Doesn't show up on scoping, because they inflate you with air. Only would show up on a defacogram. But this type of issue doesn't come and go, and is more consistent or progressively worsens with time. Straining makes it worse too. Hopefully, it is not that.

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
I was a terrible chewer, and a few times, I had things get stuck in there... Portobello mushrooms (haven't eaten them since 2000), a frickin' bay leaf (!), almonds (that came out eventually when I nearly stroked pushing them out... They came out denuded and fully intact), and quinoa (I shudder; that stuff clumped into a tremendous ball of terribleness, after much agony). It was like each thing acted like a bathroom stopper... The liquid stool would come out, then the THING stuck in there would block the outlet, making things feel horribly backed up in there.

I've also had narrowing and required dilations.

Sounds like it could be either/or or a combo. Hope they get it fixed!
rachelraven
Flagyl isn't tolerated by some people at all and it could be making you feel tired too. I think the frequency would be greater with cuffitis. You could have hemorrhoids from straining causing the bleeding.

You are a medical student and could test yourself for cuffitis. Put on a glove, lubricate your middle or index finger and ease it up to your rectal cuff, which shouldn't be more than 2" I'd guess. If it feels swollen, hurts and/or it feels bumpy/knotty it's probably cuffitis.

OR you can wait for your appointment.

From, chronic cuffitis sufferer
TE Marie

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