I believe it was last week that I wrote a post about the fact that most deaths due to allergic reactions are attributed to medications. The greatest risk by far comes with contrast chemicals that are added to our bloodstream intravenously as an enhancement for scans. The second greatest mortality risk is apparently associated with antibiotics.
We never know what tomorrow may bring. I woke up this morning about 4 am, feeling constipated and extremely uncomfortable. Since constipation can get out of hand in a hurry with an ileostomy, I immediately suspected a blockage, either due to something I shouldn't have eaten, or a stenosis or twisted gut. I changed my appliance pouch, so I could monitor output, but there was no more output after I changed it. The one I changed out appeared to contain approximately a normal amount though, so my gut had obviously been working during the night.
The puzzling part was a dull, kind of a burning pain in my lower right quadrant, that seemed more severe at my back. I shrugged it off as part of the constipation problem, since my kidneys seemed to be working just fine. So after the sun came up, off I went to the ER.
Naturally I had to drink more contrast solution that I thought I could keep down (since I was already slightly nauseated, and that made the bloated feeling of constipation much worse). But of course the irony came a few hours later, as I was assuring the technician who was doing the scan, that I wasn't allergic to intravenous iodine contrast chemicals.


To cut to the chase, the problem turned out to be a kidney stone. I'm not aware of anyone in my family who has ever had a kidney stone problem. I don't eat any high-oxalate content vegetables (because of the ileostomy), and the only calcium supplement is in a multivitamin, so what caused the stone? Luckily it's only about 2 mm in diameter, so passing it shouldn't be a big deal, but I'm puzzled about why it formed in the first place. I use a lot of almond milk, and the Silk Almond Milk seems relatively thick, so I'm wondering if that could be the problem.
Anyway, it was great to walk out of there without any major surgery. When I went there, I was reasonably certain that I would be looking at a resection of what's left of my gut before I was discharged. But the scan of my gut looked fine, so I'm a happy camper. I even left without any new prescriptions.


Tex