Teen Outsmarts Doctors

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Teen Outsmarts Doctors In Science Class Self-diagnosis impresses docs who've missed signs of her disease for years

When doctors didn't give a Washington state high school student the answers she wanted, she took matters into her own hands.


Eighteen-year-old Jessica Terry, brought slides of her own intestinal tissue into her AP science class and correctly diagnosed herself with Crohn's disease.
"It's weird I had to solve my own medical problem," Terry told CNN affiliate KOMO. "There were just no answers anywhere ... I was always sick."
For years she went from doctor to doctor complaining of vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss and stomach pains. They said she had irritable bowel syndrome. They said she had colitis. They said the slides of her intestinal tissue were fine, but she knew that wasn't right.
"Not knowing much about a disease you're growing up with is not only nerve-wracking, but it's confusing," Terry told the Sammamish Reporter.
So when local pathologists stopped in to teach students in her Biomedical Problems class how to analyze slides, the high school senior decided to give her own intestines a look.
What she found? A large dark area showing inflammation, otherwise known as a granuloma--a sure sign of the intestinal disease.
To confirm her suspicion, she checked in with her teacher.
"'Ms. Welch! Ms. Welch! Come over here. I think I've got something!" she shouted.
Mary Margaret Welch, who has spent 17 years teaching science at Eastside Catholic School, had a feeling Terry was on to something.
"I snapped a picture of it on the microscope and e-mailed it to the pathologist," Welch said. "Within 24 hours, he sent back an e-mail saying yes, this is a granuloma."
The finding impressed doctors.
"Granulomas are oftentimes very hard to find and not always even present at all," said Dr. Corey Siegel, a bowel disease specialist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. "I commend Jessica for her meticulous work."
While Terry's glad to finally have answers, she now knows she'll have a tough road ahead.
Crohn's disease is an incurable, though treatable condition caused by inflammation in the intestines. It can cause malnutrition, ulcers, pain and discomfort.


Still, she looks towards the future with optimism. She'll begin nursing school in the fall and hopes to have a kid's book on Crohn's disease published.
 
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This is kind of nerve racking . I'm always afraid of being misdiagnosed.
 
I read this earlier today. Pretty sad she had to do it herself. My doctor was the same way. I went to her for pain in my lower back/hip. She told me a lot of things of what it could be, but never mentioned a pinched nerve. I finally figured it out looking up the symptoms on the internet.
 
Crohn's disease symptoms are so similar to colitis, I wouldn't necessarily call it a misdiagnosis. Treatment is pretty similar too. And the disease does suck, I have it, it's not fun.
 
You know what to call a person who graduates the bottom of his class in med school?




Doctor.
 
I almost wonder how she had slides of her own intestines. I can't see that as something any regular person would be able to get a hold of.
 
I hate doctors so much. Out of every profession they are the most arrogent and really don't care about what the patient has to say nor if they did they're job right.

Before I get people on here mad at me, I'm of course not talking about all doctors. And with all the medical problems that I've had to deal with it really is scary just how many of them I've seen that don't seem to know what they are doing.
 
Did she also see the herpes she got from Fred?
 
You know what to call a person who graduates the bottom of his class in med school?




Doctor.
Sad but true. I'm reminded of that episode of Scrubs where a patient asked Turk if he got straight A's in med school, and Turk (who doesn't believe in lying to comfort a patient) said his wife's breasts aren't the only C's he's had.

It's really discomforting to know that there's always the slight chance that you may get diagnosed by the doctor who narrowly graduated med school, and did just adequately enough to make it through their internship & residency training.
 

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