Wxlrnr wrote: ↑Tue Dec 06, 2022 8:04 pm
Eric, hang in there. I have kidney problems from birth and have been driving my new kidney doc crazy all year as she has been trying to figure out where I am at this point. She gave me the green light to not see her for a year. The doctors at UC are excellent. You and your mother are in my thoughts and prayers.
Hi Linn,
God bless you bro and will do.

Thankful that your doc gave you the clear for another year.
My folks and I are tremendously impressed with my Hepatologist Dr. Kenneth Sherman as he's laid back, warm, friendly and very patient and he said that the CT scan I had done here in Greenville at Wayne Health Care was the wrong kind because it doesn't have a certain feature device re honing in on a certain organ e.g. and he said its a common innocent mistake among smaller hospitals e.g. He was able to say that there are 3 areas which he thinks that one is some fat, meaning that I may have a fatty liver, another area probably just a cyst and the other area which is small could be suspicious but non aggressive and may end up also being just a possible cyst. After my getting established consultation with him, he then ordered me to have a fibro scan and some blood work which I both also had completed there today. Thankfully the fibro scan showed no scarring but just some fattiness.
I'll be getting a specialized CT scan of my liver on April 4th, 2023 at the U.C. Health campus in West Chester, OH.
Thank you very much for your prayers for us, wxbuddy.
Fun Fact: My best friend Kenny since the late 1960s from when we both resided in Cincy from then into the early 1970s, his dad Ken who is now retired, was a general surgeon and got a lot of his internship or residency at the then General Hospital which of course is now U.C. Medical Center.

There's 3 generations of Kens in that family and all born in March!

That's a Ripley's Believe It or Not entry!
Also on a non-medical note, my dad Myrl (pronounced like Merle as in Merle Haggard) received a degree in Special Ed from U.C. in the early 1970s.

He taught learning disabled boys for a time at Sharonville Elementary before entering the pulp and paper industry.