Hello there! My name is Jestina and I’m 16 years old. I just recently found out that I have Cushing’s from an endocrinologist in Washington D.C. It has taken three years to find a diagnosis. I have struggled with hormone issues ever since I was thirteen and my old family doctor originally diagnosed me with diabetes and PCOS. I didn’t think that it was unusual, especially because my mom has PCOS and diabetes runs in my family. My doctor told me that I was going through treatment for PCOS by giving me a pill to take. When I would take it, I would become very sick and I had unbearable stomach pain. It got to the point where I stopped taking it because it was hurting so badly. I was also not having any results. I still had unusual hair growth and I was starting to gain weight. This went on for a year.
About a year later, I started to face horrible back pain. I have scoliosis and my family, along with my specialists believed that it was caused by my spinal fusion. I started physical therapy when I was 15. I started to develop the “buffalo hump” and my physical therapist believed that it was the cause of spending too much time online. I thought that it was very strange though because I didn’t go online very much. I didn’t even have Facebook or any other type of social networking account. So, I went through about six months of therapy and I saw a small improvement but it didn’t last very long.
When I turned 16, I started to face even worse pain than before in my upper back. I went through multiple rounds of X-rays and spent two months home from school while my specialist was trying to find what was wrong but each time, he could never think of a reason for why I would be facing so much pain. I ended up going through a round of pain injections and it eased the pain enough for me to be back in school for the remainder of the school year. On my follow-up appointment after having the injections, my specialist suggested that maybe my pain had been caused by a hormonal problem. My mom decided to change family doctors and we went into her office less than a month ago. When my new doctor reviewed the medicines that I had been taking, she then informed us that the medicine that my old doctor gave me was actually for my diabetes and that it was the reason why I hadn’t seen any results. After I described my symptoms, (buffalo hump, moon face, unusual hair growth and weight gain, etc.) she left the room for about forty minutes to research. When she returned, she suggested that I had Cushing’s and that I should see an endocrinologist. She ordered a few rounds of blood tests and gave a referral to a doctor in Washington D.C.
My endocrinologist reviewed the blood tests and agreed with my family doctor that I most likely had Cushing’s. He ordered more blood tests and a 24-hour urine collection and they came back the way that he expected. I am now awaiting a CT scan for my surgery which should happen sometime in the next few weeks. I am hoping for great results. Apparently once my surgery is finished, I shouldn’t see anymore problems with diabetes, PCOS, or the symptoms that come along with Cushing’s.
Thank you so much for reading my bio!
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Apr 30, 2013 @ 15:31:23
Christina posted on Facebook: “Wow just wow poor girl you have really been thru it Jestina . I was 19 when I was first diagnosed and i am now 40 . You are the first person I have ever heard of that was younger then me when diagnosed . I have always said that what does not kill me makes me stronger . You will get thru this . And grow up to be an old lady like me and look back at this time . Prayers for you”
Jul 02, 2025 @ 15:21:22
Does anyone know what happened with Jestina? Did she get better post-op? I knew a person years ago who was 16 years old at diagnosis. She lived in the Atlanta area and had access to amazing doctors at Emory University Hospital. I was also a patient with a prolactinoma, not Cushing’s. I healed completely post-op within a month and my friend with Cushing’s healed as well. She had gained 100 lbs in less than a year and would have died, had they not caught it in time. This all occurred in the early 90’s and I remember learning about Cushing’s in the Emory University medical library as we were still pre-internet. It amazes me how many doctors, even today, know so little about the endocrine system and it’s so important to overall health.