Feelings Of Bed Bugs? insomnia
#1
Posted 23 December 2007 - 09:06 AM
#2
Posted 23 December 2007 - 09:46 AM
If I knew what I was doing years ago I would have half a clue today!
#3
Posted 23 December 2007 - 09:51 AM
Intolerant to all lectins (including gluten), nightshades (potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, eggplant) and salicylates.
Asperger Syndrome, Tourette Syndrome, Addison's disease (adrenal insufficiency), hypothyroidism, fatigue syndrome, asthma
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#4
Posted 23 December 2007 - 11:43 AM
If I knew what I was doing years ago I would have half a clue today!
#5
Posted 23 December 2007 - 12:48 PM
I agree that food intolerance is one possible cause. Like Ursa, I also used to have RLS - but it has gone away on a gluten-free diet. I still get twitchy when I get glutened, but I get a lot of other neuro symptoms when glutened, too (also like Ursa). I also have a couple of other intolerances that showed up when I went gluten free.
I recently found out that my Celiac son (age 7) is deficient in vitamin E, a fat-soluble vitamin. Vitamin E deficiency is rare in humans but can occur along with malabsorbtion - and it CAN cause neuro problems.
If you had malabsorption problems and you have a good, sympathetic doctor, you might ask him to test you for deficiencies in the fat-soluble vitamins, A, D, E and K. Especially if you have only been gluten-free for a short time.
Good luck! - April
#6
Posted 25 January 2008 - 03:39 PM
I washed those sheets like crazy. Everything down to the mattress pad, pillows, and comforter every day or two, plus everything I wore, sat on, or could fit into the washer. And if I couldn't, I sprayed it with Lysol.
It's really strange out of a family of 7 I'm the only one who ever noticed it.
To help you sleep, this works wonders: one 250mg tablet of Magnesium. Most people with either Type A blood type or with nutritional/mineral deficiencies lack Magnesium. It's also a natural muscle relaxer.
Whenever I feel restless or unable to sleep it works like a charm.
Also, if you're having trouble with this, chances are you also have trouble with constipation. Lack of Magnesium may be the culprit there as well. No matter how much water I drank, it never had the same effect as 1 tablet of Mg did.
Having celiac damages your ability to absorb minerals, so it would make sense to replace it.
The "bed bug" feeling, or in my case I thought it was mites appeared almost 10 years ago. (Age 26-36) Every time I got pregnant I threw up things with a lot of gluten in it, so I learned to avoid those foods. But every time after the baby was born it came back and I could never figure it out.
I've only been gluten free for 3 weeks! I'm still getting the prickly, itchy feeling occasionally, though only once or twice since I quit.
How long has it kept happening for you after you went gluten-free? I'd like to get an idea of when it will stop. I am just glad to quit washing so much extra stuff.
Take care,
Heather
#7
Posted 25 January 2008 - 04:15 PM
Gluten free since May 2004
#8
Posted 25 January 2008 - 04:35 PM
Gluten Free - August 15, 2004
"Not all who wander are lost" - JRR Tolkien
Celiac.com - Celiac Disease Board Moderator
#9
Posted 25 January 2008 - 04:45 PM
#10
Posted 27 January 2008 - 10:36 PM
Nancym, on Jan 25 2008, 07:45 PM, said:
Hi, Nancy I agree about the B vitamin deficiency here to cure RL and bed bug feelings. I have had this problem big time. It finally has gone away unless I am glutened or get exposed to some chemical I can't handle.
What resolved the increasing leg and feet burning and twitching as well as pins and needls (even though I already was on a gluten and sugar free diet), has been taking Country Life co-enzyme B vitamins.
They are best taken on an empty stomach, away from food. I usually take it at night and sometimes first thing in the morning often with L-glutamine and bromelain/papain (these last two items to help heal the lining of the gut). The Country LIfe co-enzyme B's are cheaper than the sublinguals that usually have sorbitol (which can actually contain gluten!). The B's by the way help one make proper use of carbs and are essential for nervous system health etc.
For me the co-enzyme B's have been a major life change since they also stopped my racing heart at night, help me sleep without RL and amazingly I now no longer get flu or colds etc., etc. in spite of my getting quite ill regularly since infancy!!
I agree though that magnesium is also essential for this condition to go away. B's, mag, D, K are all important for celiacs. Try reading DANGEROUS GRAINS and you will see what I mean.
Apart from that I also have had various scar tissue from past accidents and find doing yoga and stretching fairly regulary really helps calm down the nervous system as well as the muscles and the mind.
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OK I am adding this rest, which maybe should be in another post, on Bed Bugs and Chiggers:
If you find you actually have bed bugs we had an episode last year of either bed bugs or chiggers in my mothers house. We weren't sure if it was one or the other, it might have been both for all that since we live in the woods and the cats all had chiggers and also had signs of bed bugs. Its important to wash and bag everything tight. Its really awful actually. It took me two months of work to clean and bag everything since my mother and brother with downs are both such pack rats!
Of course I sprayed what I could with pyrethrins since arachnid family critters (which both pests are) are not killed by standard pesticides. They will also die however from things scratching their exoskeleton like borax.
I found using a mixture of 1 cup borax with 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar (white vinegar is made from gluten!) and 1 tablespoon non gluten liquid soap will kill the bed bugs. Use it in an extractor as well as on surfaces and in your wash as well as on any pets you might have. You can also spray rubbing alcohol (use a spray bottle) on surfaces like you couch or mattress--it kills the eggs on contact.
I found wrapping mattresses in plastic and sealing them with duct tape effective. You can also put borax straight on your carpet and leave it there before vacuuming it up a couple of weeks later. Its suggested you can put carpet tape around your bed posts with the sticky side out to capture the bed bugs and don't let the linen touch the floor.
I found that whatever it was, I didn't get it strangely enough although I was the major cleaner--even of the old hairy dog not to mention the drapes. I took the co-enzyme B's, plus was also (and still am) taking raw chopped garlic in my veggies each day. Seems to help keep the critters away!
-----Yolo
#11
Posted 10 May 2008 - 10:33 PM
#12
Posted 11 May 2008 - 10:25 AM
Inconclusive Blood Tests, Positive Dietary Results, No Endoscopy
G.F. - September 2003; C.F. - July 2004
Hiker, Yoga Teacher, Engineer, Painter, Be-er of Me
Bellevue, WA
#13
Posted 11 May 2008 - 11:07 AM
I also had RLS and the random pin-prick feelings on my skin.
For me the symptoms were related to food intolerances...mostly food chemicals which my body was unable to process.
I no longer have any of these symptoms unless I eat the offending foods.
I had wondered if possibly the feeling of bugs crawling on the skin was actually caused by a release of histamine.
#14
Posted 12 May 2008 - 11:14 AM
Ursa Major, on Dec 23 2007, 01:51 PM, said:
ditto!!
skin crawling used to wake me up in the middle of the night.
RLS used to annoy me just after dinner.
In my body they felt very different, but both go away when I'm gluten-free.
After I get glutened, and after the initial symptoms go away, it can take a couple weeks until my skin is 100% normal - I get a light itchiness (not as extreme as skin crawliness, but in that direction) almost every time I eat (within 20 minutes or so), I think it's my body getting rid of any remaining toxins, whether toxic gluten or toxins my body made to fight the gluten.
The first time I went on a purification diet (basically a paleo diet), I thought I was sensitive to everything because of this skin reaction, now I think it is part of how my body detoxes.
3 gluten-free cousins and counting (1 gold standard, 1 pos blood/no endo, 1 self/dietary diagnosed)
suspect mother was celiac (also, cousin suspects my mother's twin is celiac)
Feb 08 testing 'normal range' for gluten antibodies, IBD and food allergies
Staying off gluten - dietary reaction is compelling for me!
"Hi, I'm the gluten-free diner at your table."
#15
Posted 12 May 2008 - 12:01 PM
tbradley93, on Dec 23 2007, 09:06 AM, said:
hello
I actually did have that feeling and it was extremely irritating but it had to do either with food intolerances or with candida dying off.....I was on holidays for a week, it was the week when I started taking the supplements for candida and at the same time I had to eat some food that I was not supposed to but there was nothing else to eat on that ship.....so I don't know which one was the cause, but it definately felt like a whole army of ants was crawling on me. And the funny thing was that I had that feeling ONLY when I was about to sleep.
Graves disease June 2008
Candida overgrowth / started treatment November 2008

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