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Ligaments of hepatic flexture
Ligaments of hepatic flexture












ligaments of hepatic flexture
  1. #Ligaments of hepatic flexture full
  2. #Ligaments of hepatic flexture trial

We do our part with keeping stool soft, teas, transverse abdominal side muscle training (a form of pelvic floor training). The medical, east and west, are not doing anything. I try to find someone, who has a transverse colon fallen down, small bowel loops that crunch in the pelvisĪnd has symptoms and if a solution, help was found.

#Ligaments of hepatic flexture full

My daughter has it, but a mild version luckily, which makes sense since she has no full blown Ehlers-Danlos III, but mildly it seems). This poor woman had to get iv food and tube. (Patient was not healed from her gastroparesis, as connective tissue diseases do cause gastroparesis, too. Voila, all of a sudden, a physically fallen down gut was definitely reason for the pain! Unfortunately that woman got a quite radical operation (I don't understand why the splen flexure of colon is always taken out, why the transverse colon cannot just be shortened and both flexures kept in place? One risks permanent diarrhea if colon gets too shortened),īUT it freed her from her pain instantly after operation!!! Since my daughter can bend her thumb backwards, has pain in her hip and clicks in her hips, but is otherwise not hypermobile obviously, she is dismissed and not checked for Ehlers-Danlos (type III cannot be found genetically, but vascular type can).Īnyway it was speculated if that woman's visceroptosis (was more enteroptosis) was connected to her connective tissue disease since this anatomical speciality was not often seen in this often seen Ehlers-Danlos patients. Just this woman definitely had hypermobile joints, a form of Ehlers-Danlos (type III) sundrome. I found one recent case study and that young woman sounds exactly like my daughter (ascending colon constipation, gastroparesis, hypermobility, striae, abdominal pain, small intestine mainly in pelvis, transverse colon somewhere hanging down), I find it awfully logical, that a 'sinking' of guts can cause nerves or blood vessels being pressed on. Or if anyone knows a doc, who actually cares about this anatomy. One has to do all the digging themselves.

#Ligaments of hepatic flexture trial

Had problems due to it and some solution (like special muscle training excercises.one has to be careful due to not causing more damage, or corsetts), because since it is dismissed, there is no treatment to trial offered. The articles (incl wikipedia source, most on ncbi) are all about 100 years old, because no one cares today, hence I was interested if someone had this condition personally or friends, The problem with enteroptosis or visceroptosis is, that docs nowadays do completely dismiss this anatomical speciality since it mostly seems to cause no problem.īut what fits for 'most', doesn't fit for all Thank you Looloo, that's lovely to 'see' you again!














Ligaments of hepatic flexture