Saturday, December 29, 2012

A meeting of minds

Yesterday, Kenny and I spent some of our holiday time off together meeting with a new surgery friend.  In the midst of my work day, we met with my surgeon. The good news is that nothing in our meeting together was new information. He was very nice and kind and very well informed. We both liked him a lot and felt very comfortable with him.

All to be said, come the middle of January, I will be receiving surgery. I will be having an ileocecal resection. Below is a picture of the colon and small intestine. Basically, inside of my terminal ileum is an area that has either scar tissue or inflammation that has made my inside plumbing like a gunked up water pipe. With this area so narrowed and almost blocked, there's not any medication that can reverse the stricturing. ( There's no magic drano for this situation. The boy offered to have me try to drink a draino cocktail-- but I decline).  So, like a plummer might, my surgeon will go in, remove the narrowed and bad area and reattach the plumbing back together.



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Medically speaking, the surgeon said that from the previous studies, there appears that there's about 5 inches of my ileum that look bad. He'll remove this area and a little bit extra in order to get to healthy tissue. He'll also remove a portion of the colon ( and the appendix). Then he'll sew up the edges of the ileum to the colon.... and I'll go into recovery. 

I'll schedule the surgery next week, and he's scheduling into the middle of January.  My surgeon operates on Thursdays.... so I will be likely spending a 4-5 day period in the hospital starting on aThursday. I'll keep everyone updated on surgery day and it's quick arrival. 

So far, I'm at peace with the decision to go ahead with surgery. I have been feeling better on the low-residue diet, but i still am not feeling at my best. I want to be able to go in, take care of this and move back to a healthier Ashley. My hope is that this little surgery will remove the last crohn's from my body. There will be this wonderful, beautiful moment after surgery where all bits and pieces from this inflammation disease will be gone! I will have no more evidence of disease!! It will be a day for much jumping, dancing and celebrating !! (I will join in this celebration.... but it may take a few days till I'm strong enough to dance/jump!)


That's it from here! Happy New Year's to everyone! Here's to a happy 2013! 

Saturday, December 22, 2012



As said in the last post, I was intially diagnosed with Crohn's disease in Sept 2011, after an intial work up and colonoscopy. To say the least, that diagnosis was not the news I thought I'd hear after waking up from the sleepy-time medicine post the colonoscopy. I had started feeling sick the summer of 2011. I had an sense of fatigue, bloating and what seemed like an uncanny ability for dress pants to not fit well. I had started to have transient traveling abdominal pain that I just knew was an ulcer. As a healthcare professional and a really good nurse, I figured I knew my body and I just KNEW it was an ulcer. Work, although wonderful at the time, was stressful at the time and I figured that common symptoms would be a common illness. However, things were not as I expected. 

When reflecting on how I was initially diagnosed, the process was rather quick. I started really feeling ill in the summer of 2011 and in September of 2011 I was diagnosed with Crohn's. Part of this was due to some severe labs of a low Hemoglobin which means a low blood count. After some reading of ccfa.com, I discovered that most people who have Crohn's or Ulcerative Colitis are sick for sometimes years before they get answers. They have to live in a in-limbo time in which they know they are sick, but they don't know why. I am grateful, so grateful that my story was different. 

However, after this last bit in my tiger-belly journey, I realize that I was sick for years--but didn't know it. You see, the last few months I had started to feel ill again. After about a year on my immunosuppressant ( mercaptopurine), I had started to have an increase in abdomen pain, nausea and heartburn. I saw my GI specialist and he suggested a colonoscopy. So, about 3 weeks ago, I had another scope done. Although very little fun can be said about colonscopys,  I was anxious for the procedure. I wanted to see if my insides were looking better. I wanted to know that my immunosuppressant medicine was working. I wanted to know if there was a reason that I was feeling sick again. I figured that there would be 2 possible outcomes of this test. a) "Great news Ashley, your insides look grand. The symptoms you are having must be related to a flare +/- anxiety, stress or irritable bowl syndrome. Continue with your medicine. You are in fact getting better" b) Your insides still look inflammed and you don't have good healing. We need to change your medicines in order to keep you healthy . " 

However, as this post is entitled,  instead I was greeted with a second round of unexpected news. 
I woke up from the sleepy-time medicine and was much more confused that after my first colonoscopy. For some reason I was really confused to why I had oxygen on. I was still feeling flushed, overwhelmed by the brightness of the hospital light and pretty happy to see my parents at my bedside. And then before I knew it , my doctor was at my bedside. He led off with a positive note, "good news", my colon (or large intestine ) looked great. My 6-MP medicine had been working well. I had obtain good healing of the skin tissues and everything looked good....until... until he tried to pass the scope up the terminal ileum. This is the area when the small intestine connects to the large intestine. This area was so narrow due to scar tissue that my doctor couldn't pass the scope up ( Usually in a colonoscopy they travel up a small way into the ileum just to take a small peek). Then the real important news came. So important, that my parents called the Boy at work to let him talk to my doctor. I would need to have a small bowl follow through test to examine the extent of this narrowing or stricture. Likelihood was very good that this would require surgery and I would need to see a GI surgeon sometime after the holidays. 

Surgery. The news and option that I didn't expect to happen this soon. 75% of patient's with crohn's have surgery, a majority of these patient's have 1 or more surgical procedures during there life with this chronic disease. I have been afraid of surgery since I have been diagnosed. My goal in my medical treatment has been to avoid surgery at all cost. As a patient, I'm not crazy about the idea of surgery. As a nurse practitioner whose background is in medical management--I'm really not crazy about surgery. It's good and fine if it's the only option-- but surgery requires hospital stays, IVs for longer than a few hours, beeping IV lines, risk of infection and time off of work. How did all of my health come to this needing of this surgery. I had been taking my medications, following medical advice. I hadn't even been sick for more than a year. How could things have gotten this bad in this time frame. 

Then it hit me. My diagnosis had happened rapidly from the time frame where I had realized I was sick. But when I look back over all my health and general feelings since college, I had some symptoms of my autoimmune disease right after graduation. That was back in 2006. I remember having some belly pain, heartburn and similar symptoms while I was a RN at the James from 2006-2008. I started having night sweats some time in 2008-2009. I had been sick for a while. And the scar tissue was there to prove it all in my terminal ileum. 

A week and a half ago I had the follow up study, and the news from that was better than expected. I was worried and figured all of my medical tests would bring bad non-expected results. My small intestine looked good, except for the terminal ileum. I talked with my GI specialist and I have an appointment with my surgeon on Dec 28, 2012. I am so grateful to have these details and appointments set up before Christmas. Anxieties over what the plan could or could not be have been making me a little crazy. So, for now I can stop, enjoy a few days off of work and enjoy the holidays. I can focus of family time and celebration of Jesus' birth. I can relax for a while instead of being crazy anxious Ashley who is trying to plan the next few steps in my medical care. 
For now, I can know that I will have surgery sometime in the beginning of 2013. But for now, it's 2012 can I get to celebrate other unexpected news. The unexpected news that so many years ago Jesus was born and brought light into this world. The darkness doesn't get to win because Jesus came as a baby, fully man and lived. He ended his life my sacrificing himself for you and me by taking on all of our sin. That's a pretty amazing story of hope. 

These last few weeks have been hard in our household as my husband and I try to figure out what it means to walk through scary and unexpected times. But, as I sit and reflect on it, I choose to during this advent time, remember that the Light came to earth once and The light is coming again. There is brokeness and sickness and pain here on this earth.... but the Light came , the Light conquered death and illness and brokeness and sickness. My sickness, my need for healing via surgery and medicine, my small time to by sick and have pain now, will all pass away. I have two choices, to stay in a zone that has fear and anxieties and no presence of peace of God, or to be with Him during this time. So, I choose to be with Him. I will be with Him and he will guide me through this scary and unexpected time. His Light with surround me, keep me safe and bring me closer to  Him. 

Friday, December 14, 2012

"If we'd ever begin to truly capture the fact that God is not about making us comfortable but giving us a great story worth telling, our entire perspective would change." -Beth Moore

Thursday, December 13, 2012


 This is the place that I have decided to share my Crohn's story. My name is Ashley and a year and 3 months ago I was diagnosed with Crohn's disease. I like to say, that even my colon is an over-achiever, as I didn't actually know that I was sick until I was REALLY sick. My diagnosis process was quick, thanks to living in a small medical community this time time and God's goodness through that process last year.

I have decided to start this blog for a couple of reasons. First of all the longer that Crohn's  has a spot in my life, the more passionate I am to raise awareness of the disease process. Secondly, as I sit here and time I am sitting on the edge of a health decision. I may, very soon, be very soon needing some surgery in order to get better. I want to create a space where my friends and family from a far can go for a one stop information stop. And finally, I want to be able to tell my own individual story. As a lover of all things blogs and in individual's stories. I love reading and seeing themes of grace and hope play out in the details of people's everydays. This will be my speace to put down my details of what is happening and will happening to me in this crohn's adventure. I want to be able to document what is going on in order to showcase what the power, strength and love of Christ can do in imperfect situations like hospitals and specialist offices with sick and broken intestines and colons and a very not perfect, but lovable Ashley.

So, here we go. Below is a helpful glossary:

The boy= my husband, Kenny
Tiger Belly= my affectionate name for my crohn's
Padres= my parents who we'll call B and pally on the blog
6-MP= my current medication, immunosuppressant
T.I.= currently the normal bystander turned villian in my crohns superhero story(more on that lately), my terminal ileum


More to come soon....