Trying to Look Under the Hood

This is David writing. Eva is too distracted by pain to feel like writing.

I suppose that first paragraph could be the entire blog post. But I’ll add details.

We still don’t know what’s wrong. We know it isn’t c. diff. Multiple stool tests have confirmed that. And there is no evidence of a UTI. But Eva’s white blood cell count has been gradually rising, suggesting an infection somewhere in the system. Unless it’s just being caused by stress.

There is, as mentioned above, a lot of pain. Some days are better than others. Some days are worse. They aren’t ever good.

As I mentioned last time, the GI wants to do a special MRI called enterography. This would give a close look at Eva’s intestines. Unfortunately, to do this, Eva would need to get 1500 ml of contrast into her digestive tract. Now, we have a fairly clear idea of how much we can put into Eva’s intestines, depending on whether the contrast acts more like her formula or more like water.

If it acts like formula, Eva can pump it in at 3.5 ml/hour. In which case it would take 428 hours to get it in. Obviously a non-starter. If it acts more like water (or exactly like water) we might get it in at the rate at which she can push water flushes, roughly 60 ml/15 minutes. Which would take more than 6 hours. And assumes that Eva can maintain that rate for more than 2 syringes of 60 ml each, which is untested. And it assumes it doesn’t start pushing stuff out the other end, which seems like a really bad assumption.

All in all, it seems unlikely that this is going to work at all.

After pointing all this out to various doctors, we are now working on a variety of other options.

An abdominal CT scan, which is looking at Eva’s liver in particular. Her liver enzymes have been elevated for a while, and people aren’t delighted with that. Eva cut out one pain med mid-week and we will see if her labs look better Monday (we should have gotten a first look with Thursday’s labs, but they seem to have gotten lost in the maze that is Quest Diagnostics). The CT scan should show any physical abnormalities there.

A colonoscopy with small bowel enteroscopy has been ordered because if you can’t see it with an MRI, you can always go in with a camera and take a look. This is looking, again, for physical features that might lead to pain and trouble feeding enterally.

Meanwhile, Eva is not only getting full nutrition from TPN (IV nutrition) she finds herself somewhat dehydrated, despite receiving 2.25 liters of fluid with the TPN. So we are now infusing another liter of saline either daily or every other day depending on how Eva feels. This also falls into the “somewhat weird” category.

In summary, we still don’t know what’s going on, Eva’s miserable, and completely over being a medical mystery.

One thought on “Trying to Look Under the Hood”

  1. This endless struggle is distressing even as a bystander. I get the impression her care team is more responsive on this coast, which is heartening, but even so, they are not magicians and this condition is complicated.

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