I always puree beans for any meal. (Pre-chewed, so to speak, so no worries over missing chewing a bean).@Rosie56
I, too get heartburn, because I love beans which is one of my daily foods along with fish and strawberry or broccolli. Eating beans is a kind 'hard' to digest, even though I chew them several times to get them in my stomach.
I take 'PANTOPROZOLE 40 mg' which is a prescription med., and works really good for my stomach/digestion, but it's not OTC med. You need to ask your GP for it to rx.
That's the med I take for it too.@Rosie56
I, too get heartburn, because I love beans which is one of my daily foods along with fish and strawberry or broccolli. Eating beans is a kind 'hard' to digest, even though I chew them several times to get them in my stomach.
I take 'PANTOPROZOLE 40 mg' which is a prescription med., and works really good for my stomach/digestion, but it's not OTC med. You need to ask your GP for it to rx.
As I read your story, I was hoping for a happy, (healed) outcome. I'm very sorry it did not happen, but your resilience to stay positive in spite of the bad(worse) times can carry you through. God bless.Had a ruptured appendix many years ago. The surgeon explained that he removed 12 inches of my small intestine and a fist size piece of large intestine. That's the only explanation I got. Went on with my life feeling mostly normal. After 20+ years I started having some issues. Uncomfortable stomach and bowel issues, not real serious, not all the time.
They slowly became more noticeable and about 10 years ago I ended up seriously anemic. The doctor had no clue, but I researched and found out the last 18 inches of your ileocecal is where B12 is absorbed and I had most of mine hacked out. Started taking B12 twice a day and my anemia went away. Then I figured out I had no ileocecal valve to stop backflow from my acending colon back into my small intestine. So I always have small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, which causes IBS and probably Crohn's disease. Three different doctors pretty much flat out ignored me and didn't offer much help.
I do the best I can, some days are OK, others kind of miserable. I have experimented and learned several tricks which help. One of these is drinking lots of water, which may help people with IBS. Another is to keep a rigid schedule on eating and going to the bathroom always at the same time. Of course a careful diet helps, but not always the same for all people.
I don't know how, but while my schedule is pretty limiting I have managed to stay mostly functional. Working out, running and riding my bike always helps me feel better. I am just trying to stay positive and make the best of things, no point in giving in or giving up to become totally miserable. Not happening...
The doctor should have taken this more seriously. My father was 78 when he developed severe abdominal pain. This was on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. The ER doctor poked him and said he was probably exercising too hard. He was on pain meds, bedridden and severely nauseous on Thanksgiving. I tried feeding him soup but he couldn't even hold that down. I went back to the pharmacist to increase the pain medication.My sister went through severe abdominal pain once a month for months a few years ago. (She's now 90 years old). Her doc said something about a blockage. I don't know how he treated it, but she went from 130 something or more down to 103 as he tried for a cure, avoiding surgery. When she told/wrote me he prescribed a laxative I was shocked and very angry. How stupid! She was down to 101 before he finally took care of it with surgery. Thankfully she came out okay, the blockage was taken care of and she has been fine since. I don't know what the blockage was.
Re: antibiotics, I've taken Z-Pacs for infections and they've cleared me out like prep for a colonoscopy so I think they can add to stomach issues.No, why would they.
Unfortunately for me, it has been a life sentence, had it since the day I was born; so did my mother and her mother. And according to something I read a few months back by one of the foremost GI doctors in the U.S. (don't remember his name, sorry), all of the GI and IBS research, including all the latest research, had led that community to the conclusion that some poor people are just born with terrible digestive tracts about which not a darn thing can be done--not diet or anything else--other than the people should eat very little amounts (like 2 or 3 bites) of food at a time and wait several hours before eating again.Treat it as a three-phase journey, not a life sentence.
Nope. The only thing that gives about a 1 percent relief bump is to go at least 36 hours between eating anything and I just can't go that long without eating anymore (headache, shakes).are there any micro-habits (stretching, peppermint tea, heating pad, whatever) that give you even a 10 % relief bump?
Thank you for this post! This is exactly how I feel. I only developed IBS in the last decade, but I get severe diarrhea in the morning, and I always inwardly flagellate myself over whatever I ate recently. And I've done a million things for it already: the Low FODMAP diet, meditation, doctors, probiotics, fiber, etc.Unfortunately for me, it has been a life sentence, had it since the day I was born; so did my mother and her mother. And according to something I read a few months back by one of the foremost GI doctors in the U.S. (don't remember his name, sorry), all of the GI and IBS research, including all the latest research, had led that community to the conclusion that some poor people are just born with terrible digestive tracts about which not a darn thing can be done--not diet or anything else--other than the people should eat very little amounts (like 2 or 3 bites) of food at a time and wait several hours before eating again.
At first, that depressed me but then again it was kind of a relief because all my life I've heard that sufferers of IBS are doing something wrong (not eating right, not drinking enough water, not exercising enough, getting too stressed) and trying *everything* and nothing, nothing helps much if at all and for someone to finally realize it's not always the patient's fault (other than choosing the wrong parents to be born to ha ha) is kind of a relief.
I spend time on the Mayo Clinic IBS site and seems like all of the patients on there have tried everything (even seeing Mayo doctors and surgeries) and nothing has worked for them either (not for any length of time anyway).
I struggle with IBS as well, but I've managed to keep it pretty much under control with diet. I used to take dicyclomine, but I prefer to avoid prescription meds if at all possible.
The state I live in is so desolate, though, that long drives spike my anxiety. It's not like more urban areas, or the East coast, where I grew up, with an exit every mile or so. There are at least 20 miles between exits, and most of those exits are marked "No Services." It gets stressful.
Hi @officerripley,
I hear you , for some of us IBS feels wired in from birth, and no single diet or pill flips it “off.” What has helped me is thinking in terms of dialing down the volume on multiple triggers rather than hunting for a miracle cure:
• Genetics we can’t change, but we can still tweak the environment. Tiny adjustments (eating ~2–3 bites every couple of hours like you mentioned, keeping hydrated, walking after meals) don’t “cure” me, yet they shave down the intensity of flares.
• Gut–brain axis TLC. I do ten-minute breathing drills twice a day; when my stress hormones stay lower, the cramps usually stay quieter too.
• Gentle foods in small, frequent portions. My gastro had me test a simplified low-FODMAP pattern. I’m not strict forever, but on rough weeks I still lean on rice, oats, eggs, firm bananas, and lactose-free yogurt in child-size servings.
• Antibiotics only with caution. One round of rifaximin helped a flare linked to suspected SIBO, but afterward I rebuilt my microbiome with probiotics and soluble fiber.
No one should blame themselves for “picking the wrong parents.” We just tune a lot of little knobs food volume, timing, nerves, sleep and aim for the best-possible normal. Curious: are there any micro-habits (stretching, peppermint tea, heating pad, whatever) that give you even a 10 % relief bump? I keep a running list and love learning from other veterans.
What has helped me is thinking in terms of dialing down the volume on multiple triggers rather than hunting for a miracle cure:
Wow, I had no idea there were so many side effects to Bentyl, @CaliS! Scary ones, too. I should have read the fine print more carefully. I didn't take it for long, fortunately.Yeah... bizarre how the side effects can be as bad as the condition....
Dicyclomine can cause a range of side effects, including:
- Drowsiness
- Dizziness
- Blurred vision
- Dry mouth
- Nausea
- Constipation
- Nervousness
- Excitement
- Confusion
- Difficulty urinating
- Tachycardia (fast heartbeat)
- Hallucinations
- Difficulty swallowing
- Weakness