Hi Group,
I've never been part of a J-pouch group even though my husband has had a J-pouch since 1999. But we are having lots of issues and I am hoping someone here may have some helpful suggestions, if not shared experiences.
My husband is very tall (6'6"). He has had several "twists" and, after a long eval at the Mayo in 2020, they explained that he wasn't exactly a great candidate for this surgery because of that height. Basically, if you pull a hose taught, it has a tendency to twist. That is pretty much what happens with him. OK, well that stinks but we didn't have a lot of options in 1999 & here we are, 20+ years later.
My husband is now 58 and he had many years where his life was okay. Never great, but livable. In 2016, he had brain surgery followed by radiation (this is an important part in regard to his health now. You'll see. Hang tight.)
Within weeks of completing radiation, he had another GI twist and since that surgery, he has not regained "livable" status.
One improvement after that surgery is that he had a section of bowel that was always tender when he passed food. He has a tender spot but it's much less than it ever was so he firmly believes that there was a kink that got worked out a lot during that surgery.
But since 2016, he has had chronic pouchitis. He is now disabled and takes infusions of Entyvio to keep things beaten back. We sold our home and moved 2 hours south to be near his doctors.
RECENTLY, the infusion doc ordered labs which came back with extremely high eosinophils AND basophils. He also has elevated CRP and atypical lymphocytes and LOW RBC and Hemoglobin.
There are very few things that are likely culprits: GI and a blood cancer like lymphoma or leukemia.
His GI doc flat out does not believe the abnormal labs are due to GI (not the pouch nor the infusions). Well, that kind of narrows the options to lymphoma or leukemia (from radiation...???). The problem is that I don't believe that it's not GI. I totally love his GI doc but I suspect (and very much hope!!!) he is wrong about the labs not being tied to GI.
The tender spot doesn't bother him if he doesn't eat solid food so he has been drinking a lot of water. He is having a lot of water in his pouch but I think it can be expected because of his lack of solids! Although he's losing the extra 25# he was carrying, this cannot be his long-term solution. He has had 2 emergencies during driving that have required him to seek the side of the road. Does anyone have any suggestions?
Also, has anyone experienced the labs I mentioned above? Was it your GI? Beyond scoping his pouch, do you have any suggestions on how to definitively determine that it is NOT GI?
I'd rather rule in/out GI before looking at cancer. My husband is BEYOND depressed and has lost his zest for living. I don't know how things would go if we are forced to rule cancer in/out. He has more than he can get his head around right now. Adding another medical issue may not bode well for his mental health.
I'm eager to hear from anyone who has any suggestions. He has more labs due this week and a pouchoscopy next week (December's scope looked very good and the tender spot is much further inside the intestines toward the stomach ). I don't expect the pouchoscopy to yield much.
Thanks for any guidance,
Kelly