Hi Barb135, thanks for your reply.
Yes currently i am seeing urology. i just noticed that he prescribed me propiverine hydrochloride not Elmiron, is the same thing with different name?
i took it for 1 week 2 days now (2 weeks of med given), yesterday i felt better without any pain at all i tot is recover but this morning when i woke up i feel some pressure on the bladder.
sometimes i don't feel the pain unless i press on my bladder. if in this situation, do i still need to visit my urology to let him perform scope or i should leave it just like this since it do not bother me if i don't press on my bladder. i just follow IC diet? what do you think?
Hi Jenny, i would like to know what is your status now?
ur sympotms almost same with mine. my urology doc suspected that i had IC. i had bladder pain/ pressure for 2 months now. went to see 3 gynea and they first tot is UTI and prescribed me antibiotics but does not work.Then they refer me to Urology. Currently i am prescribed Elmiron and ask to take for 2 weeks (just started the med for 2 days) and he told if my pain still not recover he have to perform scope on me.
i am worried to death now. Doc told me that if i really have IC, it is very troublesome. i am feeling super upset now as i am planning to conceive baby. With condition like this, i don't think i am able to have another baby. i am really upset.
Thank you for the suggestion to tap into the ICA; I've already been there quite a bit and do go there quite often ... their site, however, is considered competing to MedHelp because they also have patient forums, etc, so while information from the site is allowed here, unfortunately, links to their site are not.
I found the IC diet on the ICA website and it's been a great help to me.
I'm relatively new to the diagnosis, though I've had the symptoms for years.
Yes, thank you, I'm aware that gabapentin helps many people with IC...I'm happy to know that you're one of them.
My own IC is currently controlled by diet. As long as I avoid certain foods that trigger flares, I do relatively well.
I did take gabapentin for quite some time for unrelated peripheral neuropathy and the biggest draw back for me was massive weight gain. Since I have hypothyroidism, which also causes weight gain, I had to go off the gaba in order to be able to lose some of the weight it caused me to gain, since excess weight can also put pressure on the bladder. Along with IC, I have a neurogenic bladder and mild pelvic organ prolapse.
You may want to tap into the Interstitial Cystitis Association (ICA). Their website has lots of information and forms of support.
Additionally, Mayo Clinic has a guide to preparing for an IC appointment that could be helpful to check out before you next appointment. It has things like specific questions to the doctor, like:
Will my symptoms eventually go away?
What kind of tests might I need?
Will changing my diet help with my symptoms?
Could the medicines I take be aggravating my condition?
Are there any medications that would help ease my symptoms?
Will I need surgery?
Good luck to you!
Hi, interesting g to read your' comments I am a male and have suffered from IC for around twenty four years, I've had all the tests and treatments going over the years, nothing really helped until I happened to be working for a doctor one day and the subject came JP, he asked whether I had tried Gabalentin,which is usually prescribed for epilepsy but also for nerve pain,I hadn't but asked my GP to prescribe it, it has helped me greatly and twelve years on I still take it daily,it doesn't cure IC but greatly relieves the pain, I also take Solpadkl (co-codamol )which also reduces pain and frequency, with these two I've only missed about three days work, due to IC in about nine years. If you would like a y further into I'dbe Vlad to help ask know what a hell of a problem KT is. John.
Your symptoms are classic for Interstitial Cystitis... IC is "not" an STD; it has nothing to do with an STD, though sex can cause a "flare" or make it more painful. IC is an inflammation in the walls of the bladder; it's also called Painful Bladder Syndrome (PBS).
I had recurring UTI's for many years, but some get it without even having a UTI.
Many people with IC have lesions inside their bladder called Hunner's lesions, which can be seen via the cystoscopy that you're having in a couple of weeks. However, IC can be present without the lesions, as well.
It affects all of us differently. For some people, it's very painful all the time, for others it's not too bad.
The treatment will depend on how the IC affects you. Standard treatments are instillations in the bladder of medicated liquids, which you have to hold there for a certain amount of time so the medication can work. Some women have so much pain that they have to be on medication.
Many of us can control a lot of the symptoms with diet. There are a lot of foods that seem to irritate the bladder and avoiding those seems to help many people. Basically, the foods to avoid are those with a lot of acid, such as citrus and spicy foods, but we all have our own triggers. For me, salt and sugar are the biggest triggers and a flare can last from a couple of days to a couple of weeks.
A "flare" feels just like a UTI, but there's no infection present.
Some also find that vaginal dryness causes similar symptoms. Vaginal estrogen can help with that, if you are post menopausal. Some doctors recommend a 1% hydrocortisone cream for itching of the outer vaginal area.