Lactating and not pregnant Entocort?
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- Little Blue Penguin
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- Location: kansas city Mo
Lactating and not pregnant Entocort?
I have been taking 9mg a day of entocort for 9 months now, however my question is this, over the past two months I have been having two menstruals a month, and today noticed that I am lactating, I do not feel that I am pregnant since I am having the menstruals. Does this mean that it is effecting my adrenal and or pituitary gland. I have an appointment scheduled my my PCP on thursday and then an appointment with my GI the following week. Any help would be appreciated
- natythingycolbery
- Rockhopper Penguin
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- Little Blue Penguin
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- natythingycolbery
- Rockhopper Penguin
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- Little Blue Penguin
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Crystal,
You apparently have hyperprolactinemia. IMO, the odds of that condition being caused by Entocort are close to zero. If you're not pregnant, then it's probably due to some form of hypothalamic-pituitary dysregulation. In some cases, it can be due to a prolactinoma, so you definitely need to have your doctors check it out. It's even possible that it may be related to hypothyroidism. Do you have hypothyroidism, or have you been tested for it lately?
If, for some reason, Entocort is not a treatment option, there are approximately half a dozen 5-ASA drugs that can be safely used to treat the disease, such as Asacol, Aprisa, Lialda, Colazal, Pentasa, etc.
Suppressing the prolactin level in your system will probably affect your MC symptoms - it could either make the symptoms worse, or better, so be aware of that change. Obviously, the reasons for this are poorly understood, and little research has been done in this area, unfortunately, so no one can predict which way your symptoms will go in response to moderating your prolactin level.
Tex
You apparently have hyperprolactinemia. IMO, the odds of that condition being caused by Entocort are close to zero. If you're not pregnant, then it's probably due to some form of hypothalamic-pituitary dysregulation. In some cases, it can be due to a prolactinoma, so you definitely need to have your doctors check it out. It's even possible that it may be related to hypothyroidism. Do you have hypothyroidism, or have you been tested for it lately?
If, for some reason, Entocort is not a treatment option, there are approximately half a dozen 5-ASA drugs that can be safely used to treat the disease, such as Asacol, Aprisa, Lialda, Colazal, Pentasa, etc.
Suppressing the prolactin level in your system will probably affect your MC symptoms - it could either make the symptoms worse, or better, so be aware of that change. Obviously, the reasons for this are poorly understood, and little research has been done in this area, unfortunately, so no one can predict which way your symptoms will go in response to moderating your prolactin level.
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
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- Little Blue Penguin
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Sat May 08, 2010 8:14 am
- Location: kansas city Mo
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- Little Blue Penguin
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Sat May 08, 2010 8:14 am
- Location: kansas city Mo
Not Pregnant
I just went to the doc today and did a test and I am definitely not pregnant and still lactating the doctor did a breast exam and said yep thats milk lol waiting on my blood test results to come back hopefully they get back before the 8th he wants me to take them to the GI appointment
Unless you have an exceptional GI doc, I would be surprised if she or he will be able to accurately interpret your blood test results and/or correlate them with your hormonal issues. I would think that you will probably need to see a gyno and/or endocrinologist, to track down the problem.
Tex
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
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- Little Blue Penguin
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- Location: kansas city Mo
so far no results waiting on blood labs still, the GI doc said that it can't be the entocort because if it was building up in the blood I would have gained wait, Im down about 4 lbs over the last 2 months also. Hope it nothing too bad. however since I am still having bouts of D they put me on a scheduled dose of loperamide 3 2mg pills a day along with the 9mg of entocort. If the problem doesn't resolve they are talking about doing another colonoscopy just had one 8 months ago to see if I am resistant, and the talk of prednisone came up today
Your GI doc is full of Some people who have MC gain weight while taking Entocort, while others lose weight.Crystal wrote:because if it was building up in the blood I would have gained wait
I can absolutely guarantee that if your GI doc is recommending a second colonoscopy, so soon after the previous one, that's a dead giveaway that he or she is lost, and knows virtually nothing about MC, let alone how to treat it. He wants to use you as a guinea pig, to learn on. IMO, you need to find another GI doc, ASAP.Crystal wrote:If the problem doesn't resolve they are talking about doing another colonoscopy just had one 8 months ago to see if I am resistant, and the talk of prednisone came up today
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
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- Little Blue Penguin
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Sat May 08, 2010 8:14 am
- Location: kansas city Mo
i have tried gluten free no change in symptoms so I put that back in my diet, However certain vegetables I can't tolerate like green peppers, red peppers, and lettuce of course think that is almost everyone. I have also noticed meats almost all red meat I can't eat I stick with chicken and pork. Nothing with any kind of spice or kick to it at all or I will go back to where i started. Milk can cause me problems also. However the food stuff is still a work in progress I started out on nothing but chicken and rice for a month and that didn't help either. Kind of lost on what to do
I tried a month of going gluten-free, another week going lactose-free, etc. Nothing helped. The problem was I was intolerant to all of the foods I eliminated one at a time. Since I was still ingesting other problematic foods, I never saw any improvement.
Many of us have found the Enterolab testing to be helpful at determining the most common intolerances of gluten, casein (dairy), soy and eggs. I don't know if you've had this testing; if not, you might want to consider it. It really helps to have reliable test results to help determine your intolerances.
Gloria
Many of us have found the Enterolab testing to be helpful at determining the most common intolerances of gluten, casein (dairy), soy and eggs. I don't know if you've had this testing; if not, you might want to consider it. It really helps to have reliable test results to help determine your intolerances.
Gloria
You never know what you can do until you have to do it.
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- Little Blue Penguin
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Sat May 08, 2010 8:14 am
- Location: kansas city Mo
CBC came back
My prolactin levels are normal however my TSH level is .18 and my glucose showed high so does this mean that I am definitely hyperthyroidism? Just went and did more labs today to check TS3 level and some other test to check the sugar levels when the nurse told me about the thyroid level showing hyper I stopped listening for a minute