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Jamers, I may have missed this, but the doc you are going to, is it a GI? If it is just a PCP, I suggest going to a specialist. I only say this because my sister is having GI issues and refuses to see a GI. So she has gone gluten free and is still GF even though all of her symptoms have not disappeared (to me that indicates that gluten isn't the issue.) My concern is that there is some underlying issue that is NOT getting taken care of because she refuses to see someone who can/will order the proper tests. (I am not saying her PCP hasn't ordered tests, but she is stumped, so to me that means a specialist is the next step.)
I saw some lactose free yogurt the other day in the grocery store... I thought all yogurt was lactose free. but maybe I was wrong.
I was told in the class I took because they see so many patients with ibs that they do a group class that gi docs generally will not work super hard and run all kinds of tests on someone with ibs symptoms because it isn't life threatening or even dangerous at all and is really just highly uncomfortable and the tests always come up negative. Bit that it is really common and you have to just play around with dietary changes until you find something that works. But maybe that is just my insurer.
They also pointed out that depression and anxiety are highly correlated with IBS...which I didnt know.
I was told in the class I took because they see so many patients with ibs
I have seen a GI for a few things. I initially went to her for GERD issues, but ended up having IBS issues. I talked to her about what my sister was going through and my GI told me she would run specific tests (she would do an endoscopy to start) if my sister was her patient (my sister does not live near me or I would make her see my doc.) So maybe it depends on the GI doctor. I am not saying that they wouldn't tell you to cut things eventually, but I feel a good doc could run SOME tests first. But I would say if after you cut out different food groups, if you can't find something that helps, you need to see the specialist...and you will obviously be armed with the knowledge of what did and did not work.
I wonder why this is such a problem these days. Was it always a problem and just part of life, not something we went to the dr for, in previous generations? Or, is there a huge surge in the number of people with ibs, I wonder?