Thursday, July 7, 2011

Good Days and Bad Days

Since I last wrote we have seemed to have more bad days than good days. During my last post I had hoped she had been relaxing in the pool. I arrived home that night to find her confined to the couch, ill and exhausted.

The Zyrtec has not helped. Her insurance have denied her referral approval at least temporarily until someone who has seen her states that she needs to go out of network. According to my discussions with them the PCP won’t state that as they have not treated her and know nothing about the rareness of the disease.

Although the GI doctor is completely on board with Tylyn going to Colorado, his paperwork also does not reflect what the insurance company needs; a reason why she requires an allergist and GI doctor 1630+ miles away when there are plenty of competent doctors in WNY to treat her.

Really? Name one.

Although they empathize with why we want to go to a specialty clinic not one of the doctors has stated a need. Our case is weakened when Tylyn’s current allergist provides a treatment regimen that does not address anything she needs to be seen for.

This resulted in a heated discussion with the Allergist on Tuesday. I had wanted an appointment to follow up on the allergy medication that is not helping Tylyn. I also wanted to discuss a course of treatment in the interim as her GI doctor is doing on his end.

He stated he had no openings for Tylyn until July 14th. He proceeded to talk down to me that he knew Glenn Furuta, that he was aware of who David Fleischer was and that he had worked with them both and could coordinate treatment for Tylyn. I reemphasized that he did not even recall how long Tylyn had been on the Prednisone and that when it caused problems he had referred her to her PCP who also knows nothing about any course of treatment she was undertaking.

The allergist decided to lecture me that he was not an acute care clinic and each and every patient got a portion of his time and that it was wrong that people had tried to fit me in the next day but he would not see her. He then continued to lecture me that he knew what Eosinophiliac Esophagitis and Gastroenteritis was and that he would gladly discuss what he knew because he had worked with Dr. Furuta.

Sick of being bullied at this point I plainly state he puts down that he wants to treat my daughter, but there’s been no talk of testing, more specifically, patch or RAST testing. I know it will be repeated in Colorado but we could begin to uncover some preliminary allergens here to help her feel better. I said you might know Dr. Furuta & Fleischer but you most definitely are not them.

The call ends with no resolve other than the Allergist indicating that any letter that needs to discuss Tylyn’s suggested course of treatment in Colorado should be well thought out and written in a well executed manner. No duh. Like I was actually was hoping for more of the same “We can treat her here.” which according to the insurance company has put Tylyn in jeopardy of possibly only receiving a referral for the GI and not the Allergist in Colorado.

A late afternoon call from Denver revealed Tylyn can’t go to the October 27th clinic due to obligations of Dr. Furuta. I count my blessings that I haven’t purchased plane tickets and that it gives me more time to get the insurance straightened out, however it does mean longer until Ty is seen and her allergist maybe Dr. Fleischer or another doctor. Since requests for the insurance company have to be doctor specific it poses a problem. Back to square one.

Yesterday we went to the GI. I brought with me my charts and data; only two weeks worth but beginning to show a trend. Large amounts amount of bowel movements (5-6)=lots of pain and exhaustion. Low number (1-2)= little pain and relatively a good day. Also correlated with this data is the day she exhibits the most allergic symptoms, i.e.  headache, nausea, itching, etc., she has the most problems with her tummy. I’m talking on average between 10-14 symptoms. Good days are as little as three.

Requires more research and perhaps a beginning of an elimination diet. My rhetorical question for Colorado was, why does the chick with the 2 year degree come up with all the data?

The afternoon allergist appointment was no help either. The NP was hostile at best and then rebuked my data about the FDA changing the warning of the Singulair warning in three years claiming, “ In ten years she only had one patient come forward and say they were having mood changes.” Perfect. As the largest drug for Merk grossing $3.9 BILLION dollars, what is one little life in one doctor’s office?

And by the way, hasn’t there been study after study about patients not reporting how they feel because doctors are quick to blame everything on psychological issues. Hmmm…. Suicidal thoughts on an asthma medication? Not what I would consider typical side effects. Lord knows they have blamed Tylyn’s medical problems on emotions.

But I have regressed. I forgot the most important part. How the NP said she didn’t really know that much about EE or EG. How she wasn’t the best person to treat Tylyn. How patch testing is only for chemicals.

Wait---- What? So since when are peanuts a chemical? And corn and the other food allergy patch tests that are done in Denver.

Isn’t that contradictory to the following excerpt from this article

‘Egg, milk, and soy were identified most frequently with skin prick testing, whereas corn, soy, and wheat were identified most frequently with atopy patch testing. In more than 75% of patients with EE, both symptoms and esophageal inflammation can be significantly improved with dietary elimination of foods. Skin prick and atopy patch testing can help identify foods in most patients.’

Additional resources can be found here which counter the statement made by the allergist yesterday that RAST testing is unreliable compared to skin prick testing.

In vitro tests for specific IgE (radioallergosorbent tests [RAST]) are more practical than prick skin tests for food allergy screening in the primary care office setting.’

In the same article there is additional information:

Although allergic eosinophilic gastroenteritis is an IgE-mediated disease in some patients, about one half of patients do not exhibit specific IgE antibody to foods. Patients with allergic eosinophilic gastroenteritis have severe reflux, postprandial abdominal pain, vomiting, early satiety and diarrhea. The diagnosis is suggested by the presence of inflammation and significant eosinophilic infiltration of the esophagus, stomach or small intestine. Treatment with a strict avoidance diet using an elemental formula is efficacious in some patients.

And this, which I believe started when Tylyn was a baby:

The symptoms of infantile proctocolitis are limited to the lower gastrointestinal tract and are of short duration. The ingestion of the responsible food (usually cow's-milk protein or breast milk from mothers who are consuming cow's milk) provokes diarrhea with blood in the stool, but anemia rarely occurs.

I find it interesting that under allergist eosinophiliac gastroenteritis the symptoms of abdominal pain, vomiting, early satiety and diarrhea all describe Tylyn with the exception of only an occasional vomiting.

We left both doctors yesterday with some drugs. Two inhalers from the Allergist who claims she can only treat for the upper allergies like hayfever or rhinitis, and a nice dose from the GI of Pentasa which is a glorified name for an anti-inflammatory that is used in Chron’s disease.

At a whopping 2,000 mg (2g) twice a day, yes folks that is 4 pills at each setting for a child who for the last 5 days has trouble swallowing,  it seems a little strange that they haven’t at least attempted an elimination diet or some allergy testing.

At least the Pentasa is Dr. Furuta’s idea because our local GI admits he is not sure how to treat.

We rounded out our day with an hour wait for her IBD antibody testing to be drawn. Another test ordered on behalf of Dr. Furuta.

Everyone is frustrated with our local doctors and it maybe summed up best with the following FB post by Tylyn last night:  

secret#269; gotta love when your mom knows more than your specialist doctors you see :D

I don’t know more baby girl, but I am trying harder.

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