Anonymous wrote:It took me a few weeks on Rifaximin. But it can take a while if you have a lot of the archaea or bacteria. Drink lots of water to help flush it all out.
My first attempt at getting rid of SIBO was with the herbal regimen created by that Johns Hopkins doctor. I forget his name. I could tell that it was killing off the archaea, which caused my methane-producing SIBO.
However, I decided to go for Rifaximin after the herbals. After one round, the doctor made a note that my numbers were so high because I probably did not follow the dietary directions. However, another doctor said, “No, you have a very bad case of this.”
I needed a second round and finally started to feel better, which was a strange feeling after spending a decade so sick.
People kept asking if I had an eating disorder, which was very annoying.
In 2021, I thought maybe it had come back after seven years, so I visited a GI. To my surprise, they no longer require the breath test because they think it does not work. I then had to laugh at that doctor who blamed me for the wild test results now that they think the test results are inaccurate…😂😂
I had Rifaximin again, and it worked well. brain fog and other symptoms cleared up. But, after that, they said I would need an endoscopy if my problem had not cleared up. My insurance would not pay for that though.
Is it all gone? I don’t know and still worry about it a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had sudden onset heartburn and shortness of breath in my mid-fifties after traveling, after years of bloating of bloating, burping, constipation, and loose stools diagnosed as IBS. After an endoscopy and colonoscopy, the gastroenterologist saw nothing more than mild gastritis. Omeprazal/Prilosec has solved the heartburn and shortness of breath. I alternate that with a couple weeks at a time eating only foods that I know don’t trigger anything for me.
Interesting. My doctor didn’t mention IBS, but we’re only just starting to run tests. I’m glad you’ve found a routine that works for you.
Anonymous wrote:I had sudden onset heartburn and shortness of breath in my mid-fifties after traveling, after years of bloating of bloating, burping, constipation, and loose stools diagnosed as IBS. After an endoscopy and colonoscopy, the gastroenterologist saw nothing more than mild gastritis. Omeprazal/Prilosec has solved the heartburn and shortness of breath. I alternate that with a couple weeks at a time eating only foods that I know don’t trigger anything for me.
Anonymous wrote:Have you had an upper and lower endoscopy? The weight loss concerns me. For my daughter it turned out to be many ulcers in the small intestine, so the scopes revealed part of the issue and then pillcam revealed the rest.
SIBO is tough because a lot of people find the antibiotics help and then it comes right back. Robin Chutkan has some helpful info online. I have a few of her books. (She's a GI who takes a holistic approach).
Anonymous wrote:That seems extremely severe for both SIBO or h pylori. Have you had imaging?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry you are struggling with this. I had a long, serious undiagnosed GI issue and when it was finally taken seriously and a large batch of tests were done, a endoscopy slowed that my duodenum was very inflamed, but no other test was positive was except I was borderline for SIBO. My doctor decided to treat it aggressively anyway. I had two rounds of Rifaximin (14 day each) and 3 rounds of neomycin (28 days each). I started to feel better within days of starting the first course of SIBO antibiotics but still had symptoms and symptoms increased when I stoped between courses of antibiotics. I had been on an immunosuppressant medication and the doctor’s theory was that that complicated the problem. Now at the 9 months point, I am symptom free and working back from an extremely limited diet and maintaining with special probiotics. I really didn’t think I would be this well ever again. There is a research center for IBS/SIBO at Cedars Sinai in LA. Dr. Mark Pimental. The center created a second SIBO test, a blood test called IBS Smart which can be used to monitor recovery. There are a number of Dr. Pimental YouTube videos that might be helpful to you. My doctor followed the Pimental protocol. Hope this might be helpful.