Thank you! What was the result of the hair tests?gluten wrote:Hi Lilja, I have MC and also lost muscle mass. I have hair tests and was involved in a genetic research study. Jon
I lose a lot of hair too
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When I had your symptoms it was rough, rough, rough. It does get better.tingling, unsteady gait, nausea, brainfog, no appetite, slept a lot, pain in my legs and in my lower back, could not follow a simple conversation, could not concentrate on the simplest tasks… I felt like I was sitting in a bubble, just registering what was going on around me.
That's what all GI specialists say, but most of us here disagree, based on our own personal experiences, because many of us here have lower back pains especially, when we are reacting, and the pain goes away when the reaction stops. Also, many of us have leg and foot cramps at night, due to magnesium deficiency or potassium deficiency. This is not the same as leg pains however, because it's due to a mineral or electrolyte deficiency, not due to a nerve problem. While the cramps are not specifically part of the MC reaction, they are a result of the malabsorption problem that MC causes, so they are a secondary symptom of MC.Lilja wrote:I told the gastrolog doctor about my awful pain in my lower back, sciatic pain, piriformis pain, and pain in my legs. "There is no connection between your CC and the symptoms you mention", was the answer. Really?
Just click on the "Quote" button in their post. The system will open a window with the quoted message, and you can write your message below the quote, and then submit it.Lilja wrote:I haven't found out how we quote one another's posts, but her it goes:
Yes, many members here have found that acupuncturists can help with many of the perpheral (or satellite) issues associated with MC, such as nausea, and aches and pains in various locations. But the acupuncturist you met, no matter how qualified, will not be able to resolve the MC itself. Many chiropractors and acupuncturists in this country also claim that they can resolve IBDs, but it simply isn't true. They can help to relieve some of the symptoms (IOW, they can make you think that they are resolving the problem), but they cannot stop the inflammation. Only the proper diet changes can do that.Lilja wrote:Have you heard of anyone that have had help from an acupuncturist in colitis issues?
Well, I agree with him there, but if he actually understood the problem, he would recognize that the gut is the source of virtually all chronic disease that occurs anywhere in the body. The old saying that "you are what you eat" is true, because that determines what happens to every part of the body, in the long run.Lilja wrote:He is also convinced that "everything hangs together with everything" (directly translated from an norwegian expression).
Thank you!Grahm wrote:Lilja,
Welcome, I'm fairly new here but this board has saved my life. You will love everyone, they are so giving of their time and advice. Please hang in there and keep reading.
Happy healing,
Connie
tex wrote:Lilja,
That's an interesting observation. It sounds as though when your gut is full (and possibly bloated with some gas), it may be somehow causing pressure against your sciatic nerve. Otherwise the pain shouldn't go away when your bowels are empty.
Tex