Never a dull moment.

Kerissa • February 14, 2015

Hi friends,

Just an update for you!  For those who don’t know, I had to go the ER yet again this week.  My PICC line site was red, hot, and swollen, and I was experiencing low grade fevers when my home health nurse visited last Thursday and when I saw my GI specialist this past Tuesday.  He feared a line infection and wanted it to get pulled.  So Wednesday I was told to go to the ER.  When the doctors and nurses know you, you’ve been there too often…… :/  They drew blood cultures and labs to check for infection and ordered an ultrasound to rule out clots in my upper arm.  And guess what—-a clot was found in my cephalic vein!  That’s one of the complications when you have a central line.  They admitted me overnight in the ER observation unit for IV fluids and potassium because my potassium levels were low.  They also pulled my line and started me on two heavy duty blood-thinners to prevent it from traveling to my lungs and causing more problems.  Yesterday morning, the PICC team came by to place a new line in my left arm.  I was also taught how to give myself anti-coagulant shots twice a day….not pleasant.  This certain drug burns horribly!

Today I had a follow-up with my cardiologist.  We discussed my recent heart echo results, and he is going to consult with another cardiologist because they found thickening of my aorta (that was a surprise because it wasn’t there on my two previous echos!).  Also, they found a mobile mass in my right atrium, but he thinks this is congenital and shouldn’t cause problems.  Still, that was another surprise since it wasn’t found there before!  I am a puzzle, and I keep my doctors on their toes. lol  My cardiologist is also going to get in touch with my GI specialist next week to see if more sodium can be added to my TPN because my high heart rates, dizziness, and heart fluttering has been getting worse.

Monday I have an appointment at the anti-coagulation clinic to get labs drawn and see the doctor there.  And Wednesday, I have surgery to get a central line placed in my chest!  They wanted to do this soon to prevent a clot from happening again…..but who knows, I’m not the typical patient.

It’s been crazy hectic, and my arm where the clot is still doesn’t feel well yet.  But I continue to trust the Lord and persevere!  He is good.

Thank you all for your love and prayers!

P.S. A famous mito specialist from Ohio came to speak at OHSU the same evening I was in the ER…..the ER docs were so kind to let me go to it since the lecture was literally just down the hall!  It was very informative.  I was able to ask the mito specialist about my mtDNA depletion results.  He looked over the report and told me that my depletion is 99% which is very high….no wonder my GI tract is so affected.  I really hope these results and the ones pending will help me be eligible for a future clinical trial!

My new PICC line right after it got placed
By Kerissa Lee March 31, 2026
Dear Dr. Phillips, There aren’t enough words to express how thankful I am to have had such an amazing GI doctor like you these past 13 years. I think of all the hard challenges that have happened starting at age 20 and beyond: experiencing GI dysmotility, not being able to eat “normal” foods without terrible abdominal pain/distention, only tolerating soft consistencies like baby food pouches (which was not fun as a 22 year old!), needing an NJ tube placed down my nose, having a jejunostomy tube surgically placed, then no longer tolerating tube feeds, dropping down to 77 pounds, getting admitted the day after Christmas to start TPN, being surprised by the extremely high copper levels on my liver biopsy and starting treatment for that, going through septic shock which caused ischemic hepatitis (remember when my liver function test was 1674!), having sepsis 5 other times from multiple central lines and ports, requiring urgent surgery to remove my gallbladder, needing D10 added to my IV fluids for numerous mitochondrial crashes, and much more. Through all the highs and lows, you were there for me, and I truly feel like I hit the “doctor jackpot” to have had a GI specialist as caring, compassionate, knowledgeable, and kind as you. I shed quite a few tears to my chagrin at my last in-person appointment with you in February 2026, and I still do as I reminisce and write this letter. But, they aren’t just tears of sadness. They are also tears of gratitude—I know this journey would have been much more difficult if I didn’t have your wonderful care and support all these years. I’m so happy that I was able to get off of TPN back then after 5 years of being on it. Not only that, but I’m so thankful that I can eat orally to my heart’s content without pain and abdominal distention. I know that’s in part due to you, so thank you. From the bottom of my heart, thank you so very much for caring for me. I will never forget you, and I wish you all the best as you start your retirement. :’) With immense gratitude, Kerissa
By Kerissa Lee March 17, 2026
"God is always doing more than we know, working toward a good we will one day rejoice in." -Lysa Terkeurst
By Kerissa Lee March 7, 2026
Hi, friends, I would really appreciate prayer. Some of you already know this, but at the end of January, I started dealing with an abdominal abscess right next to my j-tube. I looked back through my records, and that was my 6th abscess. :( Since then, it’s sadly been one issue after another. I won’t go into all that has happened, but I’d especially love prayer for my j-tube site. After the abscess, I had my tube changed to a new one on 2/27. The surgery nurse practitioner decided to try the next size up to see if it could possibly decrease some of the leakage, but unfortunately, that was the wrong decision. It’s too large, so now the site is leaking tenfold compared to my previous size. The small intestinal fluid that keeps leaking out around the tube is full of acid which is burning my skin and making it raw. 😭 If you want to know what it feels like, imagine having a bad burn on your skin…then, on top of that, imagine acid being poured onto the burn every hour continuously. That’s how much pain I’ve been in, and I haven’t been able to sleep very well until after 6:30-7 AM each night because the burn is so intense! :’( I could cry, and I have—that’s how bad the pain is… I would show you a picture of the site but it’s not pleasant. 🥺 I’ve been emailing the nurse practitioner every single day, asking to have the tube changed back to the previous size. She hasn’t been helpful. I’ve tried all of her recommendations, but they aren’t fixing the root cause. I had to get an x-ray with contrast earlier today to check tube placement. If she does eventually agree to have the tube changed, I don’t know how I’ll bear the pain of the procedure… Remember, they don’t use sedation for these procedures (my GI specialist is shocked they don’t!), and even though I’ve been asking for lidocaine to be injected for past tube replacements, how do I bear to have needles pushed into such raw tissue?! 😭 Please pray that I will be courageous and strong in the Lord. I think of the verse from Philippians 4:19, and it’s comforting: “And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus.” He will grant me the peace and strength I need to be brave. His grace is sufficient. ❤️