Lower right pain can be due to the
appendixAppendectomy,
inflammatoryInflammatory bowel disease
Ulcerative colitis bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome. Non-GI causes can include a hernia, kidney stones or musculoskeletal causes.
I agree with the CT scan, and a negative test would make appendicitis less likely. I would consider a colonoscopy as well as a small bowel series to look for inflammatory bowel disease.
The diarrhea can be evaluated with stool cultures and tests for fat malabsorption. I would also consider a blood test looking for celiac disease.
These options can be discussed with a GI evaluation.
Followup with your personal physician is essential.
This answer is not intended as and does not substitute for medical advice - the information presented is for patient education only. Please see your personal physician for further evaluation of your individual case.
Kevin, M.D.
kevinmd_
Anyway - I'm still having the problem and some new symptoms like a sort of cramping type pain near the surface from my sternum down toward and around the belly button has been happening every day. I'm getting increasingly worried that something bad is going on, but I'm in a serious bind having no insurance. What do you think this all is and what should I do about it? I can't imagine it's cancer or anything since I've had it for so long right?
Thank you,
Ryan
My gastro has recently been prescribing a stool test - Calprotectin Assay - which is non-invasive, non-specific, but if the level is elevated, means there is inflammation in the GI tract. It is cheap to do - you just give a stool sample and the lab tests it. I am not sure if this test is available in the US, as it was developed by an English gastro in Nottingham,England. You could google it for further information.
Your symptoms could also be Ulcerative Colitis, which although an inflammatory bowel disease, is quite different forensically to Crohn's, but just as debilitating.
As far as I am aware, the only way to get a proper diagnosis is from biopsies of the intestines, which of course means invasive testing.
As you have no insurance, and some of these procedures are costly, you may find that your local hospital's social worker could help with funding.
Hope you get it sorted soon.
Take care, Liz.
Thanks for the response. How concerned should I be about Crohn's Disease? Some of the sites I've read about it sound awful similar to the type of things I'm experiencing, the pain is in the right spot for it etc... Would I seriously have been able to go for 4 years with it though without anything really major happening?
Thanks
Appendicitis was a possibility in my case, but the pain would have been severe long before I was hospitalised, so there had to be another reason.
Coeliac disease is another possibility - I was tested for this by endoscopy and biopsy, and the results were negative. I really don't know much about Ulcerative Colitis, the symptoms are similar to Crohn's, but UC is not an auto-immune disease, and is confined to the large intestine, whereas Crohn's can occur from the mouth the anus, and the eyes can also be affected. I now have "panCrohn's colitis", meaning both my large and small intestines are affected.
However - it doesn't mean a life sentence of misery - I am now on an immuno-modulator, methotrexate, and am doing well.
I hope you both get a diagnosis soon, and the appropriate treatment.
Liz.