Are there any natural remedies/foods for pouchitis? I don’t have health insurance at the moment and I’m 99% sure I have pouchitis. I have the same symptoms I always get. I feel so sick and just want this episode to be over 🥴
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There are various ideas in the Topics below: "Solving pouchitis!", "Betadine/Povidone-Iodine versus Pouchitis", "Off antibiotics for 3 weeks with oregano oil", "Marijuana & Pouchitis"... May prove of some help!
Thank you!
Cipro and Flagyl are inexpensive medications even without insurance. If you can get a prescription from a low-cost clinic or by phone from a doctor who knows you you might be able to treat the pouchitis properly without breaking the bank. If you go this route I’d recommend pricing the drugs in advance using goodrx.com so you can pick the right low cost pharmacy.
Thanks so much for the suggestion. I’ll try doing that. I can’t take Cipro because my body is resistant to it. Hoped Flagyl could be enough, last time I had pouchitis my doctor gave me 1 antibiotic but I can’t remember the name (it was 3 years ago).
Hi all, I’ve been suffering from bloating and diarrhea as well as all the lovely sounds that go along with those problems since my last revision in 2018. I live in Germany and they’re extremely conservative about prescribing antibiotics which means they won’t give me more than a two week supply which I personally think causes more problems than it helps. All this to say, I wasn’t getting much relief then on a whim I bought some powdered spirulina and began making a smoothie with one heaping teaspoon every morning. Within a couple of days I noticed that my symptoms had improved dramatically. It’s only been about 2 weeks but so far it seems to be keeping the worst of my symptoms at bay. I’ve googled spirulina and it turns out it’s not actually an algae as most articles claim but a bacteria, so maybe it’s fighting the bad bacteria? Probiotics used to work for me until this last revision. Has anyone else had any experience with spirulina?
“spirulina is a cyanobacteria. Cyanobacteria have traditionally been classified as algae, referenced as cyanophytes or blue-green algae, but today some treatises exclude them from algae.”
The spirulina supplement that’s sold isn’t viable organisms, just “biomass” from dead organisms, so it’s not a probiotic that could compete with gut microorganisms. Nevertheless, spirulina has been studied in IBD and showed some benefit in a mouse model of UC.
Interested with anybody's experience with CBD & THC, no smoking, to slow down the digestive system. How much & how often do you use.
Interactions with other drugs?