Health
Related: About this forumXrays normal. I'm torn
Yay, normal. Boo, this is really happening the pain is real its been going on a month, and i was hoping for some explanation. I am still consulting with the GI DR. I may need more sophisticated tests or something. I am not crazy. Thank you all.
tanyev
(44,508 posts)I throw this out there because I noticed a huge improvement in vague/general GI issues when I gave up dairy quite a few years ago. Things went well for years and then just recently I started having random pains in different mid-body areas, including near the gall bladder. I finally tried avoiding gluten and it got much better.
You can just try avoiding them for 2-3 weeks and see if you notice any change. Its an easy thing to check, because if things do improve you can reintroduce one or the other and see what happens.
Hope you get it figured out! Best wishes.
I eat lots of yogurt. Sometimes breakfast lunch and dinner. Stopped drinking milk.. I'll have to check this out. Thank you
tanyev
(44,508 posts)even when I was younger. But it wasnt until my late 30s that I really started having problems. I loved dairy products, so it never occurred to me to try not eating dairy until I read Why Doesnt My Doctor Know This? Its specifically written for IBS and Crohns, but there are a lot of things that I found helpful.
ETA: author David Dahlman
Warpy
(113,130 posts)There was no doubt in my case, milk was doing horrible things to me by the time I was five and I hated the stuff with a purple passion. Still do.
A trial of going dairy free won't cost anything and since you're eating a lot of yogurt, that could well be the problem. Yogurt is reduced lactose but not absent lactose. A week without any dairy products should tell you if that's the problem. If it is, don't despair, health food stores now carry a lot of vegan dairy substitutes, including yogurt.
I hope it turns out to be this easy to fix.
NNadir
(34,662 posts)After extensive scans including catheter visualization and biopsies, I was told there was nothing there. The GI guy said "take ompeprazole" which I do.
I have a family history of esophagus cancer, resulting from Barrett's esophagus, a genetic predisposition. Unlike my father and uncle, whose initial cancers were esophageal, I don't smoke. Smoking can trigger the genetic disposition.