Second doctor saying my medication is causing digestive and stomach issues, psychiatrist refuse to listen TW : puke, blood
It's been 2 years since I've had stomach issues, especially puking. 2 years ago I went to the ER and they didn't even care I went home with a prescription to check my liver but a doctor didn't even examine me. At the time I was smoking which I thought was the cause back then, but then I kept puking since I stopped (I am still cigarettes free, no vape, no nicotine, no weed, no anything) and feeling something weird in my stomach. My liver results came back okay. Then at my second go to the ER 1 year ago the doctor said I might have an ulcer because of the meds I take and go check with my GP to have an appointment I said to her my GP was brushing off my problems saying they came from my weight gain so she wrote a letter to him but : My GP didn't really care and brushed it off again and gave me anti reflux medication.
I said that to my psychiatrist she pretended not to understand saying "well none of the medication I give you cause puking" (I am on a lot of meds)
Yesterday since 3 days ago I was puking pink, signs of blood. I called the ER to know if it was an emergency or if I could wait for the December 4th, the appointment with my doctor. They told me to find a doctor today, which I did. He told me the blood is irritation since I've been puking a lot but the puking might come from my meds and I should stop them for a while to see if that's really the problem. He is the second doctor suggesting my meds are causing my gastrointestinal problems, I don't even know how to bring this up with my psychiatrist because she didn't listen to me the first time and I am sure she would be against stopping my meds for a while. The thing is in my country she is a part of a free mental health hospital and I can't afford to go to another psychiatrist. I don't know how to taper off healthily myself but man I am tired of this system where nobody takes me seriously.
I had a situation following heart surgery where I kept passing out. One thing led to another and I moved from my apartment into a house and somehow misplaced my bag of drugs.
For two weeks, I was fine, didn't pass out once despite packing boxes, moving, unpacking, etc.
When I finally found the bag, I was like "I bet this is one of the meds..." So I decided to start re-taking them one at a time.
First one I picked was Carvedilol and I passed out 15 minutes later.
Now, I'm not advising you do what I did, stopping any medication can be incredibly dangerous, but maybe make a spreadsheet of everything you're taking, why you're taking it, and any notable side effects are in order.
You might also talk to your pharmacist and explain what's going on, they might have a handle on how drug 'x' interacts with drugs 'y' and 'z' and so on.
Thank you. I know a good doctor she's just not my GP, I think I'll take an appointment with her and try to explain to her that the emergency doctor from yesterday told me to stop my medication to see if one or several of them is causing gastrointestinal issues. I think she'd be open to it. I hope you're better since your surgery.
NGL - it's been rough! Lots of complications, including a 2nd heart attack and random incidents where my heart would just STOP up to 8 seconds at a time, but I think I'm out the other side now.
I agree with the other poster, but wanted to share what I did in a similar situation.
I woke up one day with a rash on my hip. Over the next three days it spread to my whole body, I started getting swelling in my hands, feet, and face, and I was in an incredible amount of pain. This was in the middle of shutdown for Covid, so I couldn't just go to my doctor. Eventually I went to an urgent care after my husband insisted and drove me to four different locations to find one that had room. They diagnosed me with an allergic reaction and gave me IV Benadryl and light pain meds.
After confirming I hadn't eated anything new recently, the nurses there suggested I check my meds to see if I had any allergies there. I hadn't technically been on any 'new' meds, so I looked them all up online to review the interactions and warnings myself. Turns out one of the meds I was on had a rare, but not unheard of, effect of a patient having a delayed allergic reaction. I made sure none of my other meds had the same thing and called my doctor to reference that specific section of the drug overview. They checked on their end and agreed and told me to stop the med immediately since it was safer to do than risking further reaction.
I would suggest doing a bit of research on those and, if you go with an elimination method, check which ones can cause dangerous complications if stopped immediately.