My wife Kathy have Upper Right Abdominal Pain and have have oodles test minus an answer as to why. Please Help!?

Here are some specifics:
1) Dull pain which she has had for over two years surrounded by her upper right abdomen.
2) Eating does not seem to make the aching in her right side worse. The pain does not seem to follow any ingestion pattern.
3) Joint pain in the hips shoulders, collar and back which is worse in the mornings. At times she classifies is as severe.
4) An Arthritis test come back as negative.
5) Red itchy rash on her arms, legs and chest when exposed to extended period of sunlight.
6) Fatigued all the time.
7) Passed a Hida-Scan to test the gall bladder beside an 87% evacuation rate. From an article online, anything > 35% would be acceptable.
8) Missed or late periods for almost every month for the concluding year.
9) Had a colonoscopy and upper GI performed last Friday with no problems detected.
10) Weight gain of almost 30 pounds surrounded by the last year. She has stopped working out due to the abdominal pain which I am unmistaken contributed to the problem.
11) Lowgrade fever in the 99-100 range.
12) Elevated Sed Rate of 49. A subsequent trial was at 35 with 20 being the max for the usual range.
13) Swollen lymph nodes in her abdomen which be detected in a CT scan (listed as mild mesenteric adentis on the report)
14) RBC and HCT count was low on 6/3/09.

She went stern to her family physician today who is sending her to a Rheaumatologist for the joint pain but did not enjoy a recommendation for the abdominal pain. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!.
Answers:
yes,i would suggest you don't want this kind of advice from MedicineFreeFAQ.com.....
Well, the answer is completely obvious to me, and I'm sure it would be to the esteemed Dr. Gregory House (New Jersey), as ably. It's certainly not lupus. No, I'd say the problem's in her pancreas. Consult a neurologist, immunologist, and an Australian; brand name sure you do so in that particular order. Source(s): Dr. Gregory House, M.D., currently practicing at Princeton Plainsboro Hospital, NJ.
Fever indicates infection, but that may, or may not be the cause of the pain. Elevated sed rate indicates inflammation.

Your gall bladder evacuates at a majority rate, but there may be disease there anyway.

If I were a doctor, and I hold no medical training, I would also see an endocrinologist.

The liver, pancreas, and gall bladder all hang out here, and it is possible there is infection.

Inflammation also may indicate auto-immune possibilities. Some of the symptoms are lupus-like, and it wouldn't hurt to get checked out. Joint pain and sun-sensitive rash raise my suspicions. There's a blood test (ANA) that can rule it out.

The endocrinologist can help near the hormone changes and may be able to narrow down what's wrong. Source(s): I'm not a medical expert, but I enjoy a degree in Biology, and my family have nearly every illness under the sun.
It sounds like this ship requests a captain who can assimilate all this information, add a few appropriate diagnostic test and use his/her clinical acumen to solve this problem. Agree with Joe above, you need a good diagnostician. These guys are usually found at University (medical university ) teaching hospitals. Call your nearest medical school hospital and talk to someone contained by the Internal Medicine department.
Thank you VERY much for the question. I'm sorry to hear nearly your wife's illness.

First, some philosophical points.

In medicine, things are not always what they to appear to be. This phenomenon have been born out a plethora of times dating all the way support to Dr. Osler himself.

Further, in medicine, there are two competing approaches to diagnosis. The first is Occam's Razor: adjectives things being equal, the simplest explanation is likely to be the correct one. That is to say, a single unify diagnosis is the most plausible and likely the correct and only one. The second approach is entrenched in what is call Saint's Triad: more than one disease process may be responsible for the presenting illness.

So, which philosophy do internists, pediatricians, etc., take in the process of differential diagnosis? Well, to be precise highly dependent on the intelligence, experience, and acumen of the individual clinician.

Without knowing all the facts, I suspect that your wife's abdominal pain is the NOTmain problem. Her anguish may simply be a manifestsation of the problem (Occam's Razor) or problems (Saint's Triad). Often, clincians are fooled by the fallacy that a symptom or sign MUST be originating from the geographical organ system. Not true . . . ohhhh, so not true . . .

Based on the information that you've provided (thank you), I suspect that the abdominal pain is not visceral per se, but is human being caused by either a systemic inflammatory process, (i.e., autoimmune disease, paraneoplastic syndrome) or a metabolic syndrome (i.e., acute intermittent porphyria) or an infectious process.

There are several salient features in your wife's travel case, but the one that intrigues (and worries) me the most is PHOTOSENSITIVITY, which has a limited differential diagnosis. But what immediately comes to mind is systemic lupus erythematosis and acute intermittent porphyria.

If I may ask for superfluous details,

1. How old is your wife?
2. Does she have any oral or canker sores?
3. Does her urine change color when the abdominal distress strikes?
4. Is her serum calcium normal?
5. Has she been evaluated for primary hyperparathyroidism? Source(s): My remote medical training.
I'm guessing that you're getting pretty desperate to be posting this on here. An endocrinologist is a better route than a rheumatologist, as many of the symptoms appear to be hormonally relateover the moon all honesty, the best way to get a diagnosis is to be admit to a teaching hospital. Young doctors who have something to prove, combined with decades of combined experience and access to dozens of specialists equals the best condition care one can receive in the USA. Failing that, see an endocrinologist.

Related Questions:
Can you OD on xanax and what  happen if you do?   Is a sytolic blood pressure of 87 low satisfactory to be considered hypotension?   Took partially a vicodin, afterwards have a drug audition! Please minister to!?   How strongly will 5mg of generic flexeril affect the senses of an average being?   I want to become a pediatrition when I gow up, but....?  
  • When I be near the nhs doctor I looked at the computer blind and it said 289 medical summary's on my info.?
  • Does alcohol, tobacco and drugs affect the use of the pill?
  • Have you ever donated blood?