Hello! My name is Danielle and my fiance's name is Mike,
Mike was diagnosed with cf at age 13, and unfortunately I do not have his genes in front of me, but he does suffer from pancreatitis. This is what he said:
Sadly, this in unavoidable. Attacks are bound to happen. Even specialized doctors are very frustrating, giving little to no guidance other than "it happens with this type of CF" or "just keep coming into the ER when an bad attack happens." But as Mike got older, they did get less frequent. We have been together almost two years and he only had one attack just a couple weeks ago.
What helped him the most was watching how often he ate something. Mostly was spurs on an attack for him is too much breaded- high fatty foods. He stresses as soon as he felt better he would eat stuff like pizza and it would cause another attack within days. Now, this doesn't mean to shy away from the foods people with CF ultimately need to eat, but regulate the amount of food throughout the day. For example, if mike has pasta for lunch, I make something to affect of chicken, veggies, and one side of mashed potatoes for dinner. We like to think of it as not over working the pancreas with an overload of one type of food.
Also, check the dosage of his enzyme pills, for the first couple of years, they gave Mike the wrong dosage and they gave him a stronger one effectively changing his need of 15 pills a meal to 6 or 7 depending on the amount of calories. After that, the attacks did go down, but it wasn't for a couple years that they simply started fading away.
When an attack does happen, Mike only finds the fetal position comforting. It is an immense pain, and there is very little to help. Which is hard. In the end, what is best is monitor it, just make a list of when and how long the attacks happen, and compare it with a food diary. Because, sadly, with Mike it was a bunch of hit and misses even with a specialized doctor. On top of that, what is even more important is to be loving. In the end that is what he'll will remember most aside from the pain. When Mike talks of his attacks, it goes synonymously with a story about his grandma doing a funny dance; his mom stroking his back; his brothers watching a funny movie with him; all these other stories that helped get him through the rough times, and brought his spirits up.
If you have any other questions, or if we weren't very helpful, don't hesitate to ask again. Mike would love to help. Frankly, he's never met another CF'er with pancreatitis like himself.