Well, I saw my GI today, and I just can't figure him out. He was very nice at my first appointment, kinda cranky after my colonoscopy (when I demanded he actually speak to me about the surgery, as I had been promised), very patient in explaining all the results to me on the phone, okay at my follow-up, but today...
Today, he acted like it was somehow
my fault that the Entocort hadn't worked. I even told him that I'd be willing to try it a little longer, but he agreed that I should have seen results pretty quickly. He actually acted concerned that I'd lost weight (I'm 5'5" and 112 pounds, not quite skeletal, but certainly very thin), and he had me jump on the table so he could poke and prod at my tummy, which was very tender, although I hadn't noticed that the pain was there even when it wasn't actively hurting, i.e. without poking at it.
When I tried to tell him that I'd discovered some information from this site, he totally blew it off.

He doesn't seem to really know much about celiac or MC, because if he read even one book, he would see that some researchers have drawn a connection, and that it's actually fairly common to have both. I suspect the connection is in the gluten. He thinks food intolerances are completely bogus, except for the gluten sensitivity in celiac. I mentioned that many members had said it took several months, if not a year, GF, to go into remission, and he said that was crazy and it should be a matter of weeks.
So, he wants to call a couple of doctors he interned with at the Mayo clinic and see what they think, because he's "academically interested" in me bc I have celiac and MC. I didn't have the heart to tell him a bunch of other researchers had gotten there first, and I'm really not that interesting. He mentioned redoing the tests for Gluten antibodies to see if they showed I was still ingesting gluten. I had a really hard time with the bloodwork this summer, though. (I mean a
really hard time. Over the course of two days, I was "stuck" 26 times all over my forearms bc my blood wouldn't come out even when they managed to get the needle into a vein. Is that a symptom? I have really low blood pressure.) So I don't want to go through that again. I'm thinking my best course of treatment may be to take matters into my own hands and do the Enterolab tests and try to treat myself that way.
Ah, well. It is pouring rain here, so I'm going to curl up and grade papers and try not to take the ire out on my students.
Courtney