Jonathan Edwards
"Gibberish"
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2) The hydrocortisone was given to my daughter by a very well known CFS doctor in the USA who followed the work of Dr Jeffries ( the later arguing for the safety of hydrocortisone use).
Now does this mean that her adrenals have shut down somewhat? Obviously, the proper testing would need to be done.
But she's been bleeding so regularly and in the past 8 months, she has had 3 haemorrhages requiring multiple transfusions,
I have repeatedly asked physicians if the hydrocortisone could have caused these bleeds. Your comment suggests to me that it might be urgent to get to an endocrinologist and see if she really needs this hydrocortisone. I would prefer if she got off it.
3) The testing she has had is several colonoscopies, endoscopes, two balloon endoscopes: one from above one from below,CT scan, Meckels scan, 2 angiographies, and 3 video capsule tests.
We sent the video capsule CD to the mayo clinic and the doctor suggested it might be a Gist, whereas the doctor in Tampa and here suggested AVM.
4) yes, it's a university based hospital but our system is " broken" to quote a GP I spoke with a week ago.
5) my daughter does not take antiinflammatories. But if you think the hydrocortisone could be doing this, there is an urgency to address this, and to wonder if there has been erosion in the gut by these drugs. But her bleeds are profuse,with the hemoglobin having gone down to 6 in one episode. I don't know if that kind of bleeding presents with steroid use.
6) I wish I could bring my daughter, now an adult, to see you.
I wish I could be of more use but I am a retired rheumatologist with little or no real experience of ME/CFS during my working life. I got into this rather late!
All I can really do is comment from my experience as a general physician, mostly a while back. Recurrent major bleeds does not sound very likely to be due to steroids at this dosage, especially if small intestine. Nevertheless, they may contribute and my understanding is that it is generally agreed that steroids have not been shown to be of good risk/benefit for ME in the long term and as far as I know most pubic sector physicians would not prescribe. I worry about the private sector and 'well known CFS doctors in the USA' to be honest. @charles shepherd may have useful comments to make but my thinking is that someone with ME/CFS would do well to try to get off steroid support.
A dose of 15mg cortisol is likely to have suppressed a lot of endogenous adrenal function and I suspect done nothing more than replace the natural secretion with the same amount by mouth. Withdrawal can lead to low mood but with this sort of dosage it should be possible to withdraw over a period of months. I would advise seeing a university hospital endocrinologist who is not otherwise involved in ME/CFS.
Repeated major bleeding does sound to me quite likely to be due to a vascular malformation (essentially like a birth mark or port wine stain in the gut wall of no importance other than it can bleed). Laparotomy may be needed to identify and remove the problem although these days they are often dealt with by interventional radiology.
It sounds as if the Canadian system is in the same state as in the UK - I cannot understand why increasing taxation and paying the going rate for a decent health service is not seen as a desirable way of 'stimulating growth' or 'boosting the economy'. It would create thousands of jobs and lots of tax revenue and spending money to support businesses if that is what people want. But we are stuck with inadequate resources.
The rule is that I should not give medical advice and I may have strrayed outside that but all I think I am saying is to get a good endocrine opinion - as you already plan - and that the advice on further investigation of the bleeding site sounds sensible. I hope you find someone who can ease your way out of all this. I know what it is like, if an slightly different contexts from my own family life.