Tag: endometriosis diagnosis

  • Timing (and science!) is everything

    Timing (and science!) is everything

    So a couple of months on from writing about the overwhelming sensations conjured by a team of researchers, doctors and midwives actually having a plan for investigating and hopefully treating my endometriosis, I still haven’t written about the plan itself. So in theory, that’s what this blog is about but as usual, we’ll see where else it goes. 

    I should start by saying that the timing of the plan is… complicated. 2021 has been a rough old year so far (seriously, I thought 2020 was bad) and by the time I got to my expedited appointment with the endo specialist, I had decided that if the appointment wasn’t a radical change of circumstance, then it was time for me to seriously consider returning to the UK. But, as you know, the appointment did present a radical turn of events. So when the midwife asked me, moments after the gynaecologist had presented *the plan*, ‘ and just to check, you are planning to stay in Belgium, right?’ I found myself saying yes. It seemed quite a simple answer at the time but in practice, it’s been a bit trickier. 

    The plan, then, is some serious investigative work before any more surgery. Music to my ears! My doctor was honest about the fact that ‘this does end in surgery’ but that by using as many resources as possible we can try to maximise the impact of the surgery by knowing exactly where I have endometriosis in advance. The first investigation is a type of internal ultrasound using ‘International Deep Endometriosis Analysis’ (IDEA). This special, and I am expecting painful, ultrasound is part of a clinical study. Basically, the scans and the interpretation of them will be compared with what is actually found inside me during surgery. The results of the wider study will inform if and how ultrasounds using this technique can offer a less invasive, non-surgical way of diagnosing endo. I’ve never signed an informed consent form quicker. 

    The second investigation is an MRI. For years, doctor friends have been telling me to get an MRI, even privately if I had to. The problem was, even if I found the funds for an MRI, at no point had I been under the care of a doctor who could interpret anything about endometriosis from an MRI. That’s all changed now, though. This MRI won’t be pleasant, like for the colonoscopy in March, it will involve a full bowel prep and during the scan I will be filled with various fluids via my anus and vagina. Can you think of a better way of spending your summer? Ah, yes that was the crux. Summer.

    It was, is, a completely manageable crux. Both scans happen to be at various points in the summer. Which would so not be even the slightest problem, if it wasn’t for the fact that we’re still in the middle of a pandemic and I haven’t seen my family or friends at home in the UK yet this year, and many of them for much, much longer than that. In line with Brussels’ summers, I had set my heart on spending July and August working from home and reuniting with family in the UK but with quarantine restrictions and the unfortunate timing of the scans, that idea has been greatly downsized and, at times, seemed impossible. Now that I’m closer to getting home, even if it’s just for a little while, I’m finding it easier to manage but the last months have been frustrating and painful, knowing that if I stopped seeking treatment for this stupid condition then not only could I spend the summer with my family but I could consider moving back to the UK. During the last few months, I have often felt like I am inflicting unnecessary emotional pain on myself and my loved ones all for a slim chance of treating endometriosis. 

    Side note: it has been suggested many times this year that I move home and start seeking treatment in the UK again. But not only have I tried that twice with, let’s face it, pretty poor results but it would mean starting the clock again at a far slower pace, and that’s not to mention the professional and financial consequences. If I’m going to run on curative time, fine, but I’m not going to do so indefinitely. 

    Anyway, this is a problem for Right Now Hilary, stuck in Belgium without her family, but I can only hope that Future Hilary will be grateful. Persevering with life in Belgium to stay on this doctor’s books continues to feel like the right decision but it’s been a harsh reminder that sometimes, the right decision doesn’t feel like a good decision. 

    Once I’ve had the scans I will then, in the autumn, meet my gynaecologist again and discuss what kind of surgery route to go down. There may be more options when it comes to it but the two options she put to me in April were: standard laparoscopy performed by a gynaecologist to excise endometriosis from the reproductive system; or a more intense, interdisciplinary laparoscopy performed by a gynaecologist, urologist and/or gastroenterologist to excise endometriosis from additional organs, like the bowel, bladder and appendix. It’s really exciting science, medicine and surgery! Scary too though, especially if COVID will continue to limit my support system – thank god for good friends in Brussels. As always, I am managing my expectations but I’m happy to even be a guinea pig. 

    Being a guinea pig also has some other benefits because it gives me an indication of when I might have surgery. This is because the clinical study design stipulates that the surgery takes place no more than a year after the IDEA ultrasound. Timing really is everything, at the moment. 

    The plan didn’t stop there though. There was great concern from my GP, GI, new gynaecologist (and me) about the persistence and increasing frequency of rectal bleeding. For whatever reason, primary or secondary, it seemed I was bleeding out my arse when my pelvic pain flared up or when I got stressed, even though we have managed to turn off all vaginal bleeding with a Mirena coil. Something I find quite ironic, as back in the days of incredibly heavy periods, I used to say, ‘christ, I’m bleeding out my arse!’ Ah, Past Hilary, if only you knew what was to come. 

    For this reason, I was encouraged to do exactly what I didn’t want to do and go on a low-dose combined hormonal contraceptive, despite already having a hormonal coil. The logic behind this is known as ‘ovariostase’ in Dutch and French (I’m not sure about English, ovariostasis, maybe?) Essentially, it’s to turn my ovaries off and stop them from producing hormones. High on *the plan,* I said yes and then cried about it for days and refused to take what is a very expensive brand of the pill for weeks. As you might have gathered, my mood was very low and I was also worried that if I went on the pill while I was already down, I might unfairly blame the pill and unnecessarily fuel my pill-scepticism further. Eventually, after even more rectal bleeding, I took the first pill. And I’ve taken it every day since.

    Honestly, I am not happy about it, nor am I happy with my new pill-induced boobs and the other usual side effects but I am taking it on the assurance of all my doctors that this is only a temporary measure to help me now. For the first time, no one is under the delusion that the pill is a permanent solution. The bleeding has lessened significantly and when I began to notice that I worried that, like my gynaecologist back in Essex, they might say, ‘well, there we go, job done.’ What’s actually happened is that it confirmed that there is a link between my hormones and/or endometriosis and the rectal bleeding. My instincts were right. Again. 

    So that’s the plan, COVID-permitting, and let me tell you, recent events since I wrote the first draft of this blog has really rubbed the weight of that condition in… What’s nice is that although these upcoming scans are going to be uncomfortable and probably painful, they shouldn’t require any decision making on my part yet. That’s a great comfort – there have been far too many grown up decisions to make lately. Bring on a summer of scans, being reunited with my dog and avoiding major life choices.

    This week the UK government will debate the National Borders Bill, which fails to protect vulnerable refugees and will even go on to treat them as criminals. If you’re a British citizen, the Refugee Council has prepared a template email to send to your MP, imploring them to speak out and up for refugees, learn more here.

  • ‘It’s probably just the endo!’

    ‘It’s probably just the endo!’

    Recently, my body has been treating me to some different symptoms than I’m used to. Some are blasts from the past, others are brand new. Both have left me feeling more acutely unwell. My GP is on maternity leave so while I navigate these new bodily (mal)functions, I’ve been getting to know a couple of new doctors, or rather they’ve been getting to know me, in alarming detail… 

    Meeting a new doctor always brings up some sore feelings for me and involves going through the motions of doubt even the most well-meaning doctors seem to have, especially, but not limited to, believing women’s testimonies of pain. Once I got the endometriosis diagnosis confirmed, I remember thinking that although it was bad news, at least now doctors would have to believe me. Yet the last three times I’ve told a doctor that I have endometriosis, it has been met with scepticism. ‘So why do you think you have endometriosis?’, ‘we can’t know that for certain without surgery,’ ‘and has that been confirmed by laparoscopy?’ are the responses I’ve received. Perhaps I’m paranoid and I’m as suspicious of them as they are of me, but it immediately makes me cringe, knowing that what they’re really asking is: ‘is that a self-diagnosis?’ It stings all the more after I deliberately made a point of never saying ‘I have endometriosis’ before a surgeon found it – hell, didn’t I call it dementors? Another side to this is the uncomfortable truth that actually, I did think it was endometriosis, I did self-diagnose and I was right, it just took three and a half years and two surgeries for a doctor to concur. 

    At one of these appointments the doctor wanted to perform a pelvic exam. I asked if there was a way I could do what needed to be done myself and when she said no, I explained my hesitation around pelvic exams, the associated pain and my pelvic floor dysfunction. Minutes later, when I’m crying in pain and she can’t find my cervix, the doctor looked up between my legs in panic and said,  ‘oh god, is it like this for you every time? I’ll try to be quick!’ She was visibly quite shocked and suddenly started asking more questions and taking me seriously. I just sat there thinking about how the examination didn’t need to be like that, if only you’d listened to, believed and processed what I said before it. Why else would I have said it? I would love to know the answer to this question because I reckon it’s steeped in unconscious biases. Doctor friends, enlighten me! Let’s fix this! 

    Back to the present day, I’ve still got eight months until my appointment with my new gynaecologist, the first endometriosis specialist I’ll have ever seen. I’m also a month away from a colonoscopy. After months of recurrent rectal bleeding I had a slightly more serious ‘episode’ (it was actually hours after the aforementioned pelvic exam). Apparently I should have taken myself to A&E, instead I went home, freaked out and went to sleep. I’m now in a sense of heightened anxiety about going to the loo, because if there is a repeat of this episode, then I’m under strict instructions to take myself straight to hospital. My GP went through the possible outcomes of the colonoscopy, many of which are a little scary, before ending rather perkily with the alternative outcome: ‘it’s probably just the endometriosis!’ 

    While I’m patiently waiting for this mystery to be solved or at least identified, of course my body decided to help me along by giving me a UTI followed by the familiar feeling of kidney pain, sending me to the out of hours doctor on a Saturday night with a suspected kidney infection. The doctor concluded it was either the beginning of a kidney infection or the end of a serious UTI and to keep an eye on it, and then, just as I was leaving the consultation room, she added, ‘it’s also probable it’s just the endo. It can cause a lot of pain, you know.’ 

    I’ve heard that logic twice in two weeks. ‘It’s probably just the endo!’ Is it supposed to reassure me? I don’t want it to be the endo. I don’t want to have to deal with the fact that endometriosis has taken over my bowels and urinary system as well as my sexual and reproductive organs, mostly because, in all likelihood, no one will know what to do with that information. At least we know how to treat kidney infections. Saying, ‘it’s probably just the endo,’ however true it might be, is not particularly helpful or likely to result in relief any time soon. 

    The doctor I will see later this year recently appeared on a Flemish documentary about endometriosis and I was very happy to hear her say that she works together with gastroenterologists and urologists, knowing that more than one expertise is needed to deal with endometriosis. This gives me a lot of hope in the case that these unexpected symptoms are ‘just the endo.’ I just hope my body can cool the drama until then. In the meantime, the colonoscopy will take place in French and my new gynaecologist is in Flanders, so I have some vocab to swot up on… 

    Next month is endometriosis awareness month! Endometriosis UK are running an #EndoTheStigma campaign and are running lots of great online events including this one on Endometriosis and Sex during COVID-19, get involved!   

    Also, did you hear? The Birthrights charity is convening a national inquiry into racial injustice in maternity care. This is a long time coming, follow its progress here