James’ Health

The main reason I started this blog was to share about the issues James and I have been dealing with concerning his health. It has been a struggle for us, with seemingly endless doctors visits and blood tests and IgG tests and allergy tests – but we are pushing through.

To start: about 7 years ago, James got Lyme disease. Living in Ohio, Lyme is not well known or understood, which means doctors do not want to diagnose and prescribe antibiotics very quickly. So, for about 4 months, James was living with untreated Lyme disease. Finally, he found a doctor who put him on a round of antibiotics and treated the Lyme.

About a year after his round of Lyme treatment, James started noticing different symptoms: brain fogginess, muscle aches and pains, joint aches, stomach and digestive issues, etc. He ignored it for a while, but then decided it must be due to Celiac’s Disease (which runs in his family, and his sister has) and tried to cut out most gluten from his diet, with no true results. He tried more doctors, including a naturopath, who gave him lots of different vitamins and supplements to take, also to no avail. After a year of doctors, James decided they weren’t worth the trouble, and gave up on them all together – which meant he was just living with the ups and downs of a sickness he didn’t understand.

Fast-forward a few years, and he and I are dating. We had a long friendship, but a short dating relationship. You think you understand what it’s like for someone who has a chronic illness, and you think it’s easy to handle, until you get married. Then you realize, it’s really not as simple as you thought it was. James and I had a long distance relationship for most of our time dating, which made me even more unaware and disconnected from what it was really like: the days of work missed, the shutting himself away and trying to cope, his inability to explain what was really going on, etc. After we were married, he seemed disinterested in figuring out what was really going on with his health, like he had given up. That was extremely frustrating, and I wasn’t going to stand for it. I started pushing for us to try different things. The IgG test was one of the first, and gave us some food items to remove from his diet. It helped, but it didn’t make a significant difference. We followed it for six months until James decided it wasn’t worth it anymore. In a few months, he started to go progressively downhill again, so I pushed for starting doctor visits again. A coworker recommended her doctor, so I made James a visit. It began with testing for fibromyalgia, then chronic pain, then retesting for Lyme and seeing an infectious disease specialist. When none of those were right, the doctor moved on to prescribing anti-depressants, which sent James to the hospital for severe reactions.

It felt like we finally had a breakthrough when my aunt (a nurse) suggested neurontin for chronic, undiagnosed pain. The neurontin gave James a few months of taking the edge off the pain, unfortunately it worked best when combined with alcohol. As things went progressively downhill, James was having to combine the neurontin with alcohol every night to be able to sleep. I was seriously concerned about James becoming dependent on the alcohol, so I began researching anything I could find on a-msh: a hormone that helps manage and control inflammation in your body. A-msh is abnormal when people have chronic Lyme or mold illness. Reading about mold illness was the most promising thing I had found yet, so we went back to the doctor and asked if she would order different blood tests to test for all these different markers of mold illness and inflammation. When we got the blood tests back, the only thing they confirmed was that James had chronic inflammation. All the other markers for mold illness or chronic Lyme weren’t there.

Having the blood tests that confirmed chronic inflammation was both encouraging and discouraging at the same time: on the one hand the tests were telling James and I something we already knew, and on the other hand, there was finally proof that it wasn’t all in James’ head. So, I decided to research some more. In my researching, I stumbled upon leaky gut and candida. If people are not aware what those are: leaky gut is when your digestive system has more bad bacteria and flora than good, which then allows your gut to become permeable and leaks things from your gut into your body, causing food intolerances, allergies, and inflammation. Candida is basically an infection of bad yeast caused by the same imbalance. Leaky gut is something doctors can test for, the problem is finding a doctor who believes it is a real problem, and not something holistic doctors and health gurus have made up.

As I started reading more about it, James and I were both pretty convinced that this was a logical explanation. It would have started with the antibiotics he took for Lyme disease, and would have been made worse thanks to the antibiotics the doctor put him on again before he saw the infectious disease specialist.

So, this is where we are: learning and researching as much as we can about leaky gut and candida, removing soy, wheat, gluten, dairy, sugar, eggs, beef, and anything else his body seems intolerant to out of his diet, while trying to fix his leaky gut with all natural candida treatments and supplements to help his body heal.

Thanks for visiting!

Briana

2 thoughts on “James’ Health

  1. Hi Brianna. My name is Sam and I’d like to share a few tips with you that might help your husband. I’ve been diagnosed with hormonal imbalance since college and have decided to go organic and gluten free. However, I’m also a nurse and I still believe that professional advice is still highly recommended.

    Here are some of the things I’ve tried:

    Using organic Coconut sugar and Coconut Honey as substitute for refined sugar
    Drinking green smoothies at least twice a day for cleansing
    Using topical magnesium oil for sleep problems and pain

    There are many articles on these online. I hope this helps. God bless and may He heal your husband.

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  2. Reading all of this, it screams Chronic Lyme Disease to me. Tests have a very low accuracy rate. I think it would be worth it for your to visit and Lyme Literate Medical Doctor (LLMD) and go over the medial history with them.

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