just wanted to say hi! looks like others are helping with all your questions.

i don't have a definitive dx other than "inflammatory arthritis" but i too have a combination of peripheral and spinal/SI joint issues, namely inflammation of the tendons/ligaments at the entheses and thus tend to have multiple tendonitises and pull or tear various tendons, plus evidence of "arthritis" in the various joints that have been scanned, plus inflammation showing up in the nuclear bone scan. also have gastritis (and only seem to have real intestinal issues when the gastritis is flared; if i keep the stomach under control, intestines basically ok). i do think the two inflammatory diseases are connected, and my stomach troubles are not caused by drugs, though drugs like NSAIDs and even the cox2 inhibitors like celebrex will cause a flare, but the gastritis itself is genetic, just like the arthritis. also have blepharitis. would be surprised if all these inflammatory diseases are unrelated. guess i'm sharing to say that i think we can have all these different things as part of an underlying autoimmune inflammatory arthritis.

also wanted to comment on diet. i too have found that diet helps my gastritis a lot. for me i have to limit or eliminate acidic foods (citrus, tomato sauce, cranberry, pomegranate, other acidic fruits, especially underripe fruit), dairy (a little bit is ok, like an ounce of cheese or 1/2 cup yogurt, more than that and my stomach becomes inflamed), caffeine. if my stomach is really bad and thus my intestines are really bad, also have to watch the roughage (most fruits and veggies) but if the stomach is good, then those things don't bother me. and have been on a low starch diet for several years; its excellent at controlling my blood sugar and cholesterol levels including triglycerides and HDLs (started it due to being prediabetic with skewed cholesterol levels) and gives me excellent energy, but has done nothing for my arthritis. while its not the no starch diet, i'd imagine that if there was a connection, it would at least help some, though i could be wrong. but watching what i eat has helped my gastrointestinal system and my blood sugar and cholesterol so much that i'm very good at being on my diet, as you seem to be.

since i don't have a firm DX, the doctors have been very hesitant to consider the biologics, but since you do have a firm DX, its definitely something for you to consider. so many (here) have had such good success with them. i often hear "they gave me my life back", though i know others that have not been able to take them due to side effects. still its something to consider.

Without a firm DX, my rheumy has been very hesitant to prescribe drugs other than NSAIDs which i can't take. ironically he uses "safety" as an excuse, yet i can't think of much more dangerous than NSAIDs with a family history of people dying from bleeding ulcers and a personal history of gastritis. guess its all perspective. however, i was able to use his arguments to try LDN (low dose naltrexone), showing him the evidence of it working for other autoimmune diseases and appearing to be very safe in terms of lack of side effects. so i've been on LDN since september. while its not a complete answer for me, it does seem to be helpful. others here are also on it and talk a bit about it, bridget and molly are two people who come to mind who have talked it up. so LDN is another thing to consider. not sure if one can take LDN and a biologic at the same time? i've read conflicting information on this. maybe someone who is on both will chime in.

sorry to hear of all your physical issues and pain, but glad you have found us. as you will see, we are full of "advice" and "opinions", hope you find the useful gems amongst it all.



sue

Spondyloarthropathy, HLAB27 negative
Humira (still methylprednisone for flares, just not as often. Aleve if needed, rarely.)
LDN/zanaflex/flector patches over SI/ice
vits C, D. probiotics. hyaluronic acid. CoQ, Mg, Ca, K.
chiro
walk, bike
no dairy (casein sensitivity), limited eggs, limited yeast (bread)