My son will be three yrs old in April. He has never had a respiratory infection of any kind... He has battled GI issues from birth though. Starting with severe "colic" but progressing to pain, constipation/diarrhea, rashes, and spitting-up that was too bad for the doctor to continue to write off.
So we were referred and put under the care of a pedi GI for his 1st 2 yrs. He was diagnosed as having GERD with no specific cause and GI food allergies to certain proteins (casein/milk, soy, peanut) even though antigen specific testing was negative.
We removed the offending foods from his diet and have had a much healthier and happier baby... (occassional reflux, but constipation/diarrhea and rashes only when a "bad" food accidentally slips in).
Also, he is a very picky eater and was sent to a SLP to determine if he had a swallowing malfunction, but he didn't--they determined he was just picky.
His weight dropped from the 70th to the 20-30th %ile at his 2 yr appt, but both pediatrician and pediatric GI doc were unconcerned since his growth was OK, he was healthy, and he is a picky eater (plus VERY active).
Fast forward to last week (almost a year). He started having recurring incidences of rectal prolapse. Pediatrician sent us to a surgeon. Surgeon tells us surgery not warranted, and it is most likely due to straining on the potty chair during potty training. But orders a genetic carrier screen for CF...
I got curious and called and asked why this was ordered, and was told it is routine in cases of rectal prolapse just to "rule out the atypical", but then I told the surgeon about the previous GI issues (which he wasn't really aware of since he'd never seen my son before), and he became somewhat (but not greatly) concerned, and told me that being a surgeon this was not his area of expertise, but he is going to make some phone calls and do some research and decide if a sweat test is warranted in this case. He will call me back next week.
Needless to say I am very concerned and on pins and needles.
<b>Does anyone think that my story sounds familiar? Could this medical history sound like a kid that has gone undx?? Or is it pretty far-fetched based on this scenario that we have a child with CF?</b>
Any advice etc would be very appreciated...
TIA,
-J
So we were referred and put under the care of a pedi GI for his 1st 2 yrs. He was diagnosed as having GERD with no specific cause and GI food allergies to certain proteins (casein/milk, soy, peanut) even though antigen specific testing was negative.
We removed the offending foods from his diet and have had a much healthier and happier baby... (occassional reflux, but constipation/diarrhea and rashes only when a "bad" food accidentally slips in).
Also, he is a very picky eater and was sent to a SLP to determine if he had a swallowing malfunction, but he didn't--they determined he was just picky.
His weight dropped from the 70th to the 20-30th %ile at his 2 yr appt, but both pediatrician and pediatric GI doc were unconcerned since his growth was OK, he was healthy, and he is a picky eater (plus VERY active).
Fast forward to last week (almost a year). He started having recurring incidences of rectal prolapse. Pediatrician sent us to a surgeon. Surgeon tells us surgery not warranted, and it is most likely due to straining on the potty chair during potty training. But orders a genetic carrier screen for CF...
I got curious and called and asked why this was ordered, and was told it is routine in cases of rectal prolapse just to "rule out the atypical", but then I told the surgeon about the previous GI issues (which he wasn't really aware of since he'd never seen my son before), and he became somewhat (but not greatly) concerned, and told me that being a surgeon this was not his area of expertise, but he is going to make some phone calls and do some research and decide if a sweat test is warranted in this case. He will call me back next week.
Needless to say I am very concerned and on pins and needles.
<b>Does anyone think that my story sounds familiar? Could this medical history sound like a kid that has gone undx?? Or is it pretty far-fetched based on this scenario that we have a child with CF?</b>
Any advice etc would be very appreciated...
TIA,
-J