purplemartin
New member
Okay, I went back and re-read her post. There was NO other testing done, except for a sweat test, which was negative. I did misread the part about a diagnosis though. The ped thinks that with his body responding so well to the enzymes that there is a chance the child has a rare form of CF (thought it said he gave him a diagnosis)
I guess it bothers me in a way that a Ped would make such a statement but not order genetic testing to be done and then to base his theory on nothing more than pancreatic enzymes working for his patient. It just upsets me to see and fell CF taken so lightly sometimes in the medical community, of all places.
Why can't some docs see that CF is a serious disease, which needs a diagnosis soon so the best treatments can be started.
I did suggest to the poster that genetic testing needed to be done.
Don't know why that statement bothered me so, but it did. Maybe it's just me having one of those days where everything about CF makes me upset. Okay I'm done<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
I guess it bothers me in a way that a Ped would make such a statement but not order genetic testing to be done and then to base his theory on nothing more than pancreatic enzymes working for his patient. It just upsets me to see and fell CF taken so lightly sometimes in the medical community, of all places.
Why can't some docs see that CF is a serious disease, which needs a diagnosis soon so the best treatments can be started.
I did suggest to the poster that genetic testing needed to be done.
Don't know why that statement bothered me so, but it did. Maybe it's just me having one of those days where everything about CF makes me upset. Okay I'm done<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">