Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 520068647 series 3408762
Content provided by Alanna. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Alanna or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text with a question or thought on this episode ( We cannot replay from this link)

What if the reason you’re still in pain after surgery isn’t failure—it’s complexity that wasn’t fully addressed? We sit down with a neurogastroenterologist and a colorectal surgeon to unpack why deep endometriosis often persists, how bowel involvement gets missed, and what a truly coordinated plan looks like when disease touches the colon, rectum, bladder, and beyond. Their candid insights replace false hope with a roadmap: document what’s found, refer when needed, and assemble the right team before anyone picks up a scalpel.
From the GI side, we spotlight the often-ignored drivers of rough recoveries: mast cell activation, POTS, and hypermobility. You’ll hear concrete perioperative steps that make a difference—stabilizing the neck for craniocervical instability, aggressive pre-op hydration for dysautonomia, avoiding mast cell-triggering anesthetics and opioids like morphine, and keeping steroids plus H1/H2 blockers ready for intra-op flares. These are practical, repeatable moves any care team can adopt to reduce anaphylaxis risk, dampen post-op nausea, and prevent the multi-day crashes that erode progress.
On the surgical front, we examine why repeat procedures happen and when restraint is the safest choice. Rather than forcing a high-risk resection, skilled gynecologists who encounter rectal nodules document and refer to colorectal partners, which protects patients from complications. That’s not a setback; it’s modern care. We walk through how multidisciplinary planning—similar to rectal cancer pathways—improves detection of deep infiltrating endometriosis, clarifies whether staged surgery is wiser, and sets honest expectations about recovery timelines.
If you’re navigating persistent symptoms after “successful” surgery, this conversation offers clarity and a plan. Learn the questions to ask, the protocols to request, and the markers of a team that’s ready for complex disease. If this helped you, follow the show, share it with someone who needs answers fast, and leave a review with your top question for our next Quick Connect.

Support the show

Website endobattery.com

Instagram: EndoBattery

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Quick Connect Setup And Disclaimer (00:00:00)

2. Meet The GI And Colorectal Experts (00:00:39)

3. Why Symptoms Persist After Multiple Surgeries (00:02:30)

4. Mast Cell And POTS Perioperative Protocols (00:04:27)

5. Multidisciplinary Care For Complex Endometriosis (00:06:00)

6. Closing And How To Send Questions (00:06:33)

208 episodes