2 Years in Remission!

Updates from members who have been successful in controlling their symptoms.

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cmc
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:41 am

2 Years in Remission!

Post by cmc »

Hi, long time reader, first time poster!

I have read every post in this forum as I was very lost at the start of my MC journey and thought 2 years post diagnosis it was time to share my remission story.

I was diagnosed with Collagenous Colitis in late May of 2021 as a 29 year old female, 1 month after having COVID and 6 months after having my first child. I am in Australia and very lucky to have access to private health and integrative practitioners.

I was lucky to be diagnosed only 6 weeks after my symptoms started as I had a routine colonoscopy booked. I could be considered a success story as I have been in remission since I stopped my 3 month course of budesonide in November, 2021. I would like to share my story to share hope for others but also to get some further answers/clarification if possible!

I started getting abdominal cramps, intense pain, fever and nausea after I would eat my meals, particularly those with gluten or dairy. Then after a couple of weeks, the urgency came. I had diarrhea any time I would eat. So I basically stopped eating as I became so scared. I had to prepare for the colonoscopy that was checking in on previously removed polyps. The prep made me incredibly sick. I unfortunately had to have 2 colonoscopies in the space of 4 weeks. The second one was specialised polyp removal and when they diagnosed me with Collagenous Colitis.

My health background - I reacted to heat since I was 7 breaking out in hive rashes, I had glandular fever when I was 17 which took me a year to recover where my spleen was close to rupturing and I turned jaundice, I was then diagnosed with anemia and have dealt with severe anemia (I cannot product iron, nor can I store it, I am also allergic to iron infusions) the past 11 years, but despite those, I have gone 110% the past 10 years. I was healthy and physically active in every other aspect! So this diagnosis shocked me to the core.

COLITIS JOURNEY

Post diagnosis, my GI said “Food won’t matter, just don’t eat spicy food and let me know when you need another script for budesonide”. I had no idea where to start and thought “why wouldn’t food matter?”. I found this forum very early on and read basically every post, among the tears, I thought my life was over.

So this is what I did:

PHASE 1
  • 3mg budesonide x 3 per day whilst eating only basmati rice, zucchini (no skin), chicken and coconut for 1 month.
    3mg budesonide x 2 per day whilst eating only basmati rice, zucchini (no skin), chicken and coconut for 1 month.
    3mg budesonide SLOW WEAN for 6 weeks so 1 every second day, then every third day until it was 1 per 5 days eating only basmati rice, zucchini (no skin), chicken and coconut for 1 month. Completing this in November. No symptoms.
PHASE 2

Started seeing an integrative practitioner and did a stool test before providing a course of treatment. These were the stand out markers:

Calprotectin: <5.0
Faecal Secretory IgA: 370.2 L (low)

Bacteria/Virus present:
Enterococcus faecium
Morganella species
Methanobacteriaceae

Low Normal Gut Bacteria:
Bifidobacterium species 6.3 *L
Bifidobacterium longum 2.1 *L
Lactobacillus species 6.2 *L
Lactobacillus Rhamnosus 2.0 *L
Akkermansia muciniphila <dl *L
Short Chain Fatty Acids, Beneficial 11.4 *L
Butyrate 6.4 *L
  • Continued with a limited diet (Rice, Chicken, Zucchini, Coconut, Carrot) for 2 months whilst starting a natural treatment of dysbiosis to treat several opportunistic infections, low gut immunity and very low beneficial health promoting bacteria. At the same time, I introduced Vitamin D supplementation and Glutagenics (L-Glutamine and Boswellia). Kept it very simple for 2 months. I unfortunately lost a lot of weight purely from diet and restriction.
    After I had finished the dysbiosis treatment, I began a slow introduction of a prebiotic in addition to my glutagenics and vitamin D. We did not add a lot.
    I then began the slow introduction of foods. *The longer I had healed, the more I found some foods that initially did not agree with me, began to be fine.
LEARNING*

My integrative doctor, after explaining a lot of my symptoms and history straight away, thought it was triggered by inflammation from an untreated histamine intolerance. After food experimentation and symptoms, we soon discovered that histamine was the key driver. I followed an introduction of foods that were low in histamine.

I have introduced a total of 114 foods back into my diet (Vegetables, Fruit, Spices, Proteins, Grains + Misc) but continue to stay Gluten Free and Dairy Free, nothing bought off the shelf. I cook everything from scratch.

Stress is a key contributor for me as the only time I have experienced diarrhea again in the past 2 years is when I was incredibly stressed. I go back to my simple diet straight away.

I use a DAO enzyme to help combat any histamine symptoms and follow a low histamine diet. I am particular with the products I use and definitely see my hives react in Spring.

My questions are:
  • I found remissions by using budesonide (swearing to never use it again) whilst following the suggestions from this forum for the first stage. Finding remission quickly, does that mean perhaps my MC wasn’t so developed?
    Is it very possible that years of histamine intolerance caused chronic inflammation leading to MC? *Never taken NSAIDs, smoker etc.
    My family has auto-immune (r-arthritis, psoriasis) - Could autoimmune play a factor here?
    Do you think COVID was the final trigger?
    How do TH1 and TH2 immune cells contribute to colitis?
    I can eat iceberg lettuce (any lettuce), I can eat sun-dried tomatoes, lemon juice and citric acids, I can eat eggs, onion and garlic, raw fruit and vegetables, why? I don’t react at all.
REMISSION OUTCOME

I live free of nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea (I have a perfect stool now) and have found a healthy weight again. I get to live a normal life (albeit without some food), I have the ability to play with my daughter, go to work in a Senior position 5 days a week, go to the gym, be a wife, and all that beats any taste of a food.

I will never forget reading this forum when I felt like my life had ended with this diagnosis reading "It can take 2 - 5 years to heal the gut lining” and thinking, I can either start now or in 2 years wish I had started. So I just started. No one understood what I was going through, I lost my social life but my goal was to never not be able to look after my child. She was my motivation and that motivation, each minute, each day, gave me the will.

For me, it was consistency. Showing up day by day. And two years later, I am so grateful I just started. Thank you to this forum for providing hope and information when I felt so lost.
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tex
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Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 9:00 am
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Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by tex »

Thank you so much for sharing that inspiring description of your recovery. It appears that you did everything right, so that all your hard work paid off, and you were able to get your life back. With your dedication, surely your remission will last forever.

All my best,

Tex
:cowboy:

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.
cmc
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:41 am

Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by cmc »

Thank you Tex, I had some questions, I wondered if you could help with?

1. I found remissions by using budesonide (swearing to never use it again) whilst following the suggestions from this forum for the first stage. Finding remission quickly, does that mean perhaps my MC wasn’t so developed?

2. Is it very possible that years of histamine intolerance caused chronic inflammation leading to MC? *Never taken NSAIDs, smoker etc.

3. My family has auto-immune (r-arthritis, psoriasis) - Could autoimmune play a factor here?

4. Do you think COVID was the final trigger?

5. How do TH1 and TH2 immune cells contribute to colitis?

6. I can eat iceberg lettuce (any lettuce), I can eat sun-dried tomatoes, lemon juice and citric acids, I can eat eggs, onion and garlic, raw fruit and vegetables, why? I don’t react at all.

Thank you!
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tex
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Location: Central Texas

Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by tex »

cmc wrote:1. I found remissions by using budesonide (swearing to never use it again) whilst following the suggestions from this forum for the first stage. Finding remission quickly, does that mean perhaps my MC wasn’t so developed?
Although some gastroenterologists mistakenly claim that's true, I can find no medical research that shows any correlation between the extent of intestinal inflammation and actual clinical symptoms. Some people have major clinical symptoms, and only a few patches of intestinal inflammation, while others have widespread intestinal inflammation, yet show very few clinical symptoms. Apparently there are many factors affecting this situation.
cmc wrote:2. Is it very possible that years of histamine intolerance caused chronic inflammation leading to MC? *Never taken NSAIDs, smoker etc.
Yes, that's certainly possible. Histamine is a primary inflammation mediator, and chronic inflammation is the basic cause of microscopic colitis.
cmc wrote:3. My family has auto-immune (r-arthritis, psoriasis) - Could autoimmune play a factor here?
Yes. Autoimmune diseases like company. In other words autoimmune diseases promote additional autoimmune diseases. Although this isn't typically mentioned in the literature, the reason that's true, is because all autoimmune diseases involve widespread information, which leads to to malabsorption issues in the digestive system, and deficiencies of vitamin D and magnesium develop. Those deficiencies are associated with virtually every disease known to medical science.
cmc wrote:4. Do you think COVID was the final trigger?
The inflammation associated with Covid 19 can easily trigger microscopic colitis, and Covid 19 typically triggers a relapse in MC patients who are in remission.
cmc wrote:5. How do TH1 and TH2 immune cells contribute to colitis?
The information associated with TH1 and TH2 cells and the development of MC could fill a book. Suffice to say that their function is disregulated as the disease develops, primarily because the cytokines continue to drive them because additional cytokines are produced with the digestion of every meal that includes foods that trigger immune system responses.
cmc wrote:6. I can eat iceberg lettuce (any lettuce), I can eat sun-dried tomatoes, lemon juice and citric acids, I can eat eggs, onion and garlic, raw fruit and vegetables, why? I don’t react at all.
Because you're in remission, and your digestive system has accrued sufficient healing. The foods you named are irritants, but they do not cause the immune system to produce antibodies, therefore they are a problem only while we are recovering. After we recover, most of us can eat normal or near-normal amounts of those foods.

Takes
:cowboy:

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.
cmc
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:41 am

Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by cmc »

Thank you for your answers Tex, much appreciated.

I am now 7.5 weeks pregnant and have extreme nausea and food aversions. I just got diarrhoea this morning and am freaking out that the pregnancy is going to take me out of remission.

Is there anything that can help with the nausea? Struggling to eat anything as it all makes me feel sick, even my safe foods.

Thanks.
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tex
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Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by tex »

Morning sickness during pregnancy is caused by the hormonal changes that deplete magnesium. Magnesium supplements are the solution. if an oral supplement doesn't seem to help, or seems to make symptoms worse, use magnesium oil or lotion on your skin, or take baths in water saturated with Epsom salts.

The hormonal changes often cause an MC relapse for women who are in remission, and bring remission for women who were not in remission.

Tex
:cowboy:

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.
Olive
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Apr 28, 2024 3:36 pm

Re: 2 Years in Remission!

Post by Olive »

Well done Rosie, you're an inspiration ..long may your remission last
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